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Risk Assessment Committee

Advocacy

Risk assessment principles provide the opportunity for us to transform workplace safety. These proactive, preventive approaches help organizations identify risks and enable action in advance of injury, illness or loss.

Moving Beyond Compliance

GettyImages-642501608Traditional approaches to improving occupational safety and health (OSH) performance — focused primarily on injury rate reduction and/or regulatory compliance — are necessary components of OSH programs. But when used alone or in a vacuum, they force a rear-view mirror perspective that limits safety professionals from proactively reducing risk, advancing safety and driving a return on investment from safety programs. 

Risk assessment is a formal process for identifying hazards, evaluating and analyzing risks associated with those hazards, then either eliminating the hazards or controlling those risks that can’t be eliminated to minimize injury and illness potential. It’s critical to proactively prioritize and mitigate risk in advance of injuries or catastrophes.

Our Risk Assessment Committee

Through our Risk Assessment Committee we aim to facilitate OSH risk assessment’s inclusion into the organizational risk process, allowing businesses to be proactive in prioritizing and mitigating risk in advance of injuries or catastrophes.

By understanding and implementing risk-based approaches to safety management, injury/illness prevention and employee well-being, OSH professionals help their organizations improve overall performance and position themselves as high-profile contributors who help organizations achieve their goals. 

Our Goals

Through its work and initiatives, the Risk Assessment Committee pursues four distinct goals:

  1. Educate executives, the business community and OSH professionals on the role of OSH professionals in the risk process, the value of the risk assessment approach and ways to successfully implement OSH risk assessment.
  2. Improve risk-related training and education for OSH professionals so they can better understand the risk-based decision-making process and improve core risk assessment competencies.
  3. Provide a platform for the OSH community to contribute to the development of new evidence-based risk-related policies, processes and solutions. We seek ways to leverage the expertise of the OSH community in identifying and quantifying risk, advance risk-related OSH regulatory and legislative initiatives related to the management of OSH risks and identify relevant research related to understanding OSH-related risks.
  4. Provide a center of excellence for risk-related information and tools relevant to the OSH profession. This involves collecting and disseminating relevant risk-related research, collaborating with the insurance, accounting, and financial risk management industries to promote an exchange of ideas, accessing real-world practical experiences and applications, and facilitating outreach and collaboration with global nongovernmental organizations and academia.

Core Risk-Related Competencies

Many of the core competencies of risk management are defined and described in standards such as ANSI/ASSP Z10 and ANSI/ASSP/ISO 45001, both of which address OSH management systems, ANSI/ASSP Z690 (ISO 31000), Risk ManagementANSI/ASSP 590.3, Prevention Through Design.

To be effective risk managers, OSH professionals must understand:

  • The elements of and how to effectively implement and maintain a sustainable safety management system
  • Risk management terms, principles and guidelines and how to effectively implement them
  • Basic concepts of various common risk assessment techniques
  • The elements of and how to effectively conduct a design safety review and risk assessment for new designs/redesigns
  • How to incorporate enterprise risk management into the business planning and decision-making for corporate sustainability
  • How to evaluate/analyze risk assessments, establish acceptable risk, prioritize risks, and establish risk control metrics and dashboards.
  • Workplace hazards and risks and proper control means using hierarchy of control decision-making to reduce risks to acceptable levels
  • Processes for monitoring the effectiveness of risk control measures
  • How to identify predictive events or situations that may cause serious injuries or fatalities
  • Elements of an effective management of change process to mitigate risks
  • Risk factors during the construction phase of projects and necessary prevention controls to be incorporated to prevent construction work injuries or fatalities
  • How to incorporate safety and health requirements into procurement specifications
  • Requirements and process for selecting and managing contractors to mitigate risk
  • Methods and means to effectively communicate risk to stakeholders in all four stages of the operational setting: 1) pre-operational, 2) operational, 3) post incident and 4) post operation.

Risk in the Real World Video Series

View our Risk Assessment in the Real World video series, housed in the online ASSP Learning Library, that covers topics such as concepts of consultation, communicating with stakeholders, facilitating risk assessment, bowtie methodology and fatal and serious injury prevention.

View Risk Assessment Committee videos

Risk Assessment Education

ASSP is the preferred source for education among safety professionals, providing valuable training and education on a variety of safety topics, including risk assessment. In fact, you can become a risk assessment expert by earning a Risk Assessment Certificate, where you’ll learn to:

  • Implement the steps of the risk assessment process
  • Conduct a risk assessment leading to the identification and prioritization of your organization’s hazards and controls
  • Influence management to support risk reduction plans and efforts
  • Measure the effectiveness of the risk assessment process and outcomes to support you organization’s objectives

Earn a Risk Assessment Certificate

Consensus Standards

Risk assessment tools and methods are continuously evolving. Stay up to speed with help from ASSP, a leader in developing and evolving voluntary occupational safety and health standards that reflect recognized best practices both in the United States and internationally. Refer to our standards library for relevant information on how to implement best practices like OSH management and prevention through design.

Browse ASSP standards

 

Published Insights

Sharing knowledge is at the heart of everything we do at ASSP. The Risk Assessment Committee publishes insightful content to help you improve your risk assessment skills, whether you’re new to the profession or a seasoned professional.

Sample Risk Assessment Metrics and Matrixes

Other Questions?

Please contact ASSP’s Standards and Technical Services staff.  

Industry News

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  • Fall Protection Safety Harness

    The Top 10 Fall Protection Misuses and What to Do About Them

    Jul 31, 2018
    A peer-reviewed article by Craig Galecka, P.E., CSP, and Shawn Smith, CSP, titled “Fall Protection: Top 10 Misuses & What to Do About Them,” highlights common mistakes that are made when using fall protection equipment, and ways to avoid them.
  • worker using VR

    New ASSP App Brings Virtual Reality to Fall Protection Training

    Jul 11, 2018
    Fall protection training is critical to the safety of workers who perform jobs at height, and ASSP is making it safer and easier for them to learn best practices through a virtual reality application. The new ASSP VR Fall Protection Experience enables workers to train in settings that mirror actual environments without the associated dangers.
  • Machine_Shop-930858274_EDITED

    Machine Shop Safety: Learning From Incidents to Improve Safety Performance

    Jun 28, 2018
    Following an injury, Woods Hole Oceanographic institution (WHOI) developed a comprehensive machine shop safety program to proactively address safety issues.

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