
The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast Episode 87 - Hazard Identification and Risk Rating Metrics
Dr. Ayers explains two foundational leading indicators—Hazard Identification Metrics and Risk Rating Metrics—and how they work together to show not just how many hazards an organization finds, but how serious those hazards are. The episode emphasizes that strong safety systems don’t just count hazards; they evaluate risk, prioritize, and drive action.
These metrics reveal whether an organization is truly seeing its risk landscape or simply checking boxes.
1. Hazard Identification MetricsThese metrics measure how effectively the organization is finding hazards. They answer questions like:
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Are workers and supervisors actively identifying hazards?
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Are hazard reports increasing, decreasing, or stagnant?
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Are we finding hazards across all departments or only in certain areas?
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Are leaders spending enough time in the field to see real conditions?
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Number of hazards identified
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Hazard identification rate per worker or per labor hour
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Distribution of hazards (by department, shift, task, etc.)
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Who is identifying hazards (frontline workers vs. supervisors vs. safety staff)
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High identification = engaged workforce
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Low identification = fear, apathy, or lack of field presence
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They reveal whether the organization is truly “looking for risk”
Once hazards are identified, the next step is to rate their risk so the organization can prioritize.
Risk Rating Metrics evaluate:
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Severity of potential harm
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Likelihood of occurrence
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Overall risk level (using a matrix such as 3×3, 4×4, or 5×5)
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Distribution of risk across the organization
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Whether the organization is finding mostly low‑risk hazards
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Whether high‑risk hazards are being identified and escalated
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Whether risk ratings are consistent across teams
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Whether leaders understand credible worst‑case severity
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They prevent “hazard blindness” where all hazards are treated equally
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They help leaders allocate resources to the highest‑risk issues
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They show whether the organization is improving or degrading over time
Dr. Ayers emphasizes that neither metric is meaningful alone:
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High identification + low risk ratings → workers may be finding only minor issues
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Low identification + high risk ratings → workers may be afraid to report
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High identification + high risk ratings → strong visibility into real risk
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Low identification + low risk ratings → dangerous blind spots
Together, these metrics show:
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Volume of hazards
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Quality of hazard identification
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Risk distribution
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Prioritization needs
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Cultural health
Dr. Ayers highlights several traps organizations fall into:
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Counting hazards without rating them Leads to poor prioritization.
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Rating hazards without finding enough of them Indicates weak field engagement.
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Inconsistent risk scoring Teams interpret severity and likelihood differently.
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Ignoring credible worst‑case severity Underestimates true risk.
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Using the metrics to punish This kills reporting instantly.
Leaders must spend time where the work happens.
B. Train teams on consistent risk scoringUse examples, calibration exercises, and group scoring.
C. Encourage reportingReward identification, not silence.
D. Prioritize high‑risk hazardsFix severe hazards first, even if they are rare.
E. Track trends over timeLook for patterns in both identification and risk levels.
6. Leadership TakeawaysStrong safety leaders:
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Treat hazard identification as a positive behavior
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Use risk ratings to prioritize action, not justify inaction
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Look for patterns, not isolated numbers
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Build a culture where workers feel safe reporting hazards
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Use these metrics as leading indicators of system health
A facility identifies 100 hazards in a quarter:
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70 are low‑risk
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25 are medium‑risk
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5 are high‑risk
If the previous quarter had 0 high‑risk hazards identified, this doesn’t mean risk increased—it may mean workers are finally identifying the real hazards that were always there.
This is why identification metrics and risk rating metrics must be interpreted together.
