Our regulations tend to go quite OCD about isolation switches and stuff like that:
To give you a flavour of them:
Fixed appliances : isolation switches located near by.
Built-in : isolation switches if no easily accessible socket outlet is not present (and in a near by cupboard isn't acceptable anymore)
Socket outlets / plugs:
1) All outlets are shuttered (and have been since the 1940s)
2) There's no such thing as a 2-pin outlet (and hasn't been since the 1940s)
3) There's no such thing as a 2-pin plug (the ground pin's required to open the shutters)
4) All plugs carry a fuse (usually rated 3amp or 13amp) to protect the cable of the appliance.
5) The live and neutral pins are partially sheathed, so you cannot touch them when inserting a plug.
6) Most outlets have a small switch next to them, so you can shut off an appliance without unplugging it. This is kind of handy more than a specific safety feature. The idea is that it encourages people to isolate things.
7) All socket outlets are on RCD (GFCI) circuits since the late 70s in Ireland and since more recently in the UK.
Bathrooms:
No light switches or normal electrical outlets to be located in them at all!
Switches have to go outside the room in the hallway or operated via a pull cord on the ceiling.
All bathroom circuits (in Irish regs anyway) now have to be on RCD (GFCI)
Special shaver sockets that accept only a shaver plug (2 pin only found on shavers) which is connected via an isolating transformer and will only supply about 0.5A. So it's only suitable for toothbrushes/shavers.
Bathroom fans also have to have a lockable 3-pole switch which cuts the two lives (one for power, one for switching and the neutral)
....
The regs are pretty tight on a lot of those kinds of issues but they're absolutely fixated on isolating things locally.
That's an outlet:
