
The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast Episode 284 - Risk and Hazards in Occupational Safety
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Hazards vs. Risks
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Hazard: Anything with the potential to cause harm (chemicals, machinery, electricity, noise, etc.).
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Risk: The probability that harm will occur, combined with the severity of the outcome.
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Example: A ladder is a hazard; the risk depends on how it’s used (height, stability, training).
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Risk Assessment Frameworks
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Tools like the risk matrix (likelihood × severity) help quantify risks.
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Leaders must prioritize risks that are both likely and severe, not just visible hazards.
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Episode ties into earlier discussions (Ep. 92 & 93) on 3×3 and 4×4 risk matrices.
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Control Strategies
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Apply the hierarchy of controls: elimination, substitution, engineering controls, administrative controls, PPE.
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Focus on reducing risk, not just identifying hazards.
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Example: Noise hazard → engineering controls (soundproofing) reduce risk more effectively than just PPE.
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Leadership Role
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Safety leaders must communicate clearly: workers often confuse hazards with risks.
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Training should emphasize risk perception—helping employees understand not just what could go wrong, but how likely and how severe it could be.
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Leaders should foster a culture where workers report hazards early, so risks can be assessed and mitigated.
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Overemphasis on Hazards: Some organizations stop at hazard identification without quantifying risk.
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Subjectivity in Risk Assessment: Different people may rate likelihood/severity differently.
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Resource Allocation: Leaders must decide which risks to address first when budgets are limited.
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Complacency: Familiar hazards may be underestimated because workers “get used to them.”
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Always distinguish hazards from risks in training and communication.
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Use structured risk matrices to prioritize interventions.
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Apply hierarchy of controls—don’t rely solely on PPE.
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Document risk assessments to strengthen compliance and defensibility.
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Engage workers in identifying hazards and rating risks to build ownership.
