Risk Assessment. Georgi Popov
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Название: Risk Assessment

Автор: Georgi Popov

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Здоровье

Серия:

isbn: 9781119755944

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ and implement a risk assessment process(es).

      So, for safety professionals, there is also an American National Standard requiring that risk assessment procedures be established as an element within safety and health management systems.

      Adoption of 45001 was a momentous development. It has international implications of considerable measure. Safety professionals in the United States should realize that there are two ANSI standards requiring that risk assessments be made and achieve the necessary knowledge and capabilities.

      Working with design and operations personnel to assess risks and to give counsel in the decision‐making to achieve acceptable risk levels adds an easily recognized value.

      Imaginative safety professionals will recognize this opportunity to be additionally perceived as members of the management team and increase their value to their organizations.

      Two definitions, taken from standards, are presented here as illustrative. There are several others. “ANSI/ASSP Z690.3 – 2011 – Risk Assessment Techniques,” which is an adoption of “IEC/ISO 31010:2009,” this is the statement given in the Introduction.

      Risk assessment is that part of risk management which provides a structured process that identifies how objectives may be affected, and analyzes the risk in terms of consequences and their probabilities before deciding on whether further treatment is required. Risk assessment attempts to answer the following fundamental questions:

       What can happen and why (by risk identification)?

       What are the consequences?

       What is the probability of their future occurrence?

       Are there any factors that mitigate the consequence of the risk or that reduce the probability of the risk?

       Is the level of risk tolerable or acceptable and does it require further treatment?

      Risk Assessment. A process that commences with hazard identification and analysis, through which the probable severity of harm or damage is established, followed by an estimate of the probability of the incident or exposure occurring, and concluding with a statement of risk.

      Risk assessment is a fundamental component of the risk management process and an essential core competency for safety professionals.

       To Install a Risk Assessment System Successfully – A Culture Change May Be Necessary

      When safety professionals give advice on improving operational risk management systems, their overarching role is that of a culture change agent. If a risk assessment system is installed where there was no risk assessment systems previously, things will be then done differently. That means that a culture change is necessary.

      Definitions of a change agent are numerous. This definition is a composite that fits well with the safety professional’s position. It was taken from the third edition of Advanced Safety Management: Focusing on Z10. 45001 and Serious Injury Prevention, Chapter 3 – Safety Professionals as Culture Change Agents.

      A change agent is a person who serves as a catalyst to bring about organizational change. Change agents assess the present, are controllably dissatisfied with it, contemplate a future that should be, and take action to achieve the culture changes necessary to achieve the desired future.

      Unfortunately, attempts at making culture changes are not always successful. Enter “Why culture changes are not successful” into an Internet search engine and many articles on the subject will be found.

      Reflecting on this author’s experience, a few suggestions on how to achieve success in attempting to have a culture change are recorded here. There can be many others depending on the culture in a particular organization.

      1 Recognition must be given to the culture in place. Safety professionals must recognize the existing power structure and determine how to work within it.

      2 Have the risk assessment system to be installed fits the needs of the organization. Avoid complexity if that can be done. It is better to have a noncomplex system that works than to have a complex system that does not.

      3 The leadership and commitment necessary at sufficiently high levels to achieve the change must be obtained.

      4 Determine how people who do the work are to be involved and how.

      5 Align the risk assessment process with other stated organizational values.

      6 Safety professionals, the change agents, must recognize the magnitude of the culture change they propose and be patient as they proceed.

      7 Select risk assessments to be made, at first, where the outcomes will be beneficial and evident.

      8 Team building – vital to success – must be sufficient.

      9 To obtain the views of interested parties, consider holding an open house or establishing a focus group. These activities can have other payoffs as well.

      10 Prepare for the typical resistance to change at all levels. Preparation must not come up short.

      11 Communication to all personnel levels that would be affected by the change should be as thorough as needed.

      12 Try to use the wording in presenting the risk assessment system and when introducing it to people who do the work that fits with their internal shorthand.

      13 It is best to start with a limited number of clear objectives (say, three to five) and then expand the list over time. Keep your objectives simple initially, gain some early successes, and then build on them.

      14 Measurable objectives should be consistent with the overall organizational mission and its policy.

      15 Regularly communicate progress in achieving objectives to whom the safety professional reports, at staff meetings and throughout the organization, if appropriate.

      16 Management personnel who are assigned responsibility for the change should be held accountable for progress by the people to whom they report.

      17 Over time, the urgency and importance of the change may diminish and that should be anticipated and countered.

      18 Be aware that it is typical for assumptions to be are made that a change in a process or a system has occurred when it actually has not. (This is called declaring victory too soon.)

      19 Keep a tracking file suitable to the organization.

      In the literature, some writers say that a change in a system or process should not be considered a success as a culture modification until the change has been in place for at least a year. It occurs too often that operators revert to previous methods or ignore the new system if supervision allows such regression.

       Activities at the ASSP (Critiqued and approved By Tim Fisher at the ASSP) СКАЧАТЬ