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Mikeehall88  
#1 Posted : 24 April 2023 08:49:07(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
Mikeehall88

Hello All, 

It my first time posting as a new Member and recently achieved my TechIOSH. Have been working in H&S for the past 6 years in different guises. So Hello!

I wanted to ask whether people still use a scoring matrix for Risk on a Risk assessment. I have seen more recently RA's not using a scoring matrix but there are some still around in my work area that use the Scoring matrix.

What are peoples Thoughts/Experiences?

TIA

O'Donnell54548  
#2 Posted : 24 April 2023 09:13:41(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
O'Donnell54548

I am semi-retired, working only one day a week at my current employer. When I came in I found that they were using the standard 5x5 scoring system in their Risk Assessments. As this was the system they were familiar, and comfortable with I saw no reason to change this, and so have continued using this in their RAMS. 

I have found, over the years, that it is quite good when used to compare risk scores with/without controls, giving some indication of the effectiveness of your control measures. The problem often occurs when a control which reduces likelyhood brings down the score for consequence, and vice versa. However this can be addressed through eduaction. As a side note: HSE Guidance no longer uses a scoring system, IOSH Managing Safely does.

So it would appear, as is often the case with H&S, that it is down to your individual needs/wants. 

thanks 2 users thanked O'Donnell54548 for this useful post.
Mikeehall88 on 24/04/2023(UTC), Kate on 26/04/2023(UTC)
PDarlow  
#3 Posted : 24 April 2023 09:15:27(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
PDarlow

Hello Mike,

Welcome to the forum.

I myself do not use a matrix - I have adopted the HSE template. In my view you identify the hazard and assign control measures. It is more a binary system - is the risk reduced to an acceptable level (yes or No).

I still receive scoring matrices from contractors and assigning numbers to things is subjective. I have even seen those that assign a higher score to cuts and bruises versus a fatality for the risidual rating. I think a lot of the time it used to add colour to an otherwise plain and dull document. It is clear those that sign off the document have not read it before sending to me. (just my thoughts on what I deal with).

However, there are high hazard / high risk industries that do adopt a scoring matrix to make it easier to prioritise - this I do understand the need for.

Paul

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Mikeehall88 on 24/04/2023(UTC)
peter gotch  
#4 Posted : 24 April 2023 12:25:52(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Hi Mike

Welcome to the Forums.

Personally I think that for most organisations using numeric risk matrices is an unnecessary distraction, with many problems that tend to come up time after time:

First there is the problem that they give the perception of a scientific approach but are far from being a Quantified Risk Assessment for the simple reason that it is very rare that there is sufficient data to come up with anything like accurate assesments of the probability of something going wrong with the result of severity X happening.

As example, it used to be the case that about 10 people a year fell to their deaths whilst doing roofwork. But to work out what is reasonably practicable STATISTICALLY you need to be able to work out what the Individual Risk (IR) of death is per annum - See HSE "R2P" for explanation of the concept of IR within a discussion of the tolerability of risk.

But we don't know how many people do "roofwork". Might have a reasonably accurate idea of the number of people whose job title is "roofer" (or slater or something similar) BUT it's not just roofers who do roofwork.

I have investigated 10 fatal accidents during roofwork. Only about half of the victims would be described as "roofers".

So, you don't know the population at risk, you don't know how many hours on average per year that population work on roofs and hence you cannot work out the IR with any level of certainty.

Hence, it is more effective to look at the task (with any mitigations) and assess the level of risk than to try and play a numbers game which is pseudoscience.

Next the assessors almost routinely apply a worst case scenario to accident severity whilst not doing the same for occupational health risks.

So, back to those roofers, statistically they are much more likely to do die prematurely from occupational ill health (e.g. due to exposure to asbestos) than from dying from a fall. Just takes longer.

.....and the assessors determine severity according to the hazard rather than risk.

So, as example if using a scale of say 1-5, where 5 is one or more fatalities, then a 5 for a driver on a high speed road but a lower number if the speed limit is 20 or 30 mph. This is statistically nonsensical as per passenger kilometre it is MUCH more likely that A death will happen on a low speed than on a high speed road - even if that death is more likely to be to another road user (pedestrian, cyclist etc) than the driver or the passenger in their vehicle.

Then, amongst all the other issues, there is the question of volume of risk.

Back to the roofer, does the matrix recognise that only ONE person is only on the roof for two hours and reduce the risk compared to a scenario where there are 10 people working on the roof for a week?

Similarly if you have a construction site with a crane you can work out a number for the risk. What do you do if there are five cranes. Do you write out a separate line for each as the risk MUST be about five times higher. If you only have one line it follows that your calculation will underestimate the total risk.

So, you go for five lines in your matrix to solve that problem!!

If you have 100 people hitting nails with hammers will you write out 100 lines on your matrix to adequately assess the total risk faced by those hitting nails with hammers or will you take a sensible approach and dump the numbers game?

As has been said, HSE does NOT endorse these matrices and I don;t think it ever has.

What happens far too often is that people fiddle the numbers to make them work and cheats shouldn't prosper.

thanks 3 users thanked peter gotch for this useful post.
A Kurdziel on 24/04/2023(UTC), Mikeehall88 on 25/04/2023(UTC), HSSnail on 25/04/2023(UTC)
Kate  
#5 Posted : 24 April 2023 12:53:32(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Kate

Yep, still using them, still disliking them for all the reasons given above.

I gather that the late NCRQ chose not to teach the use of a matrix and I thought good on them.

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Mikeehall88 on 25/04/2023(UTC), HSSnail on 25/04/2023(UTC)
A Kurdziel  
#6 Posted : 24 April 2023 14:29:19(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
A Kurdziel

My whole beef with these (and I mention this whenever I teach the IOSH Managing Safely course) is that the whole point a risk assessment  process is to enable you decade if a particular course of action at a particular time is safe (the risk is acceptable) or not. But for the purpose of making it look more science like   instead of just stopping at RED and GREEN  people add various shades of yellow which means at the end of the fiddling of the figures you still can’t tell if something is actually safe to do.

thanks 2 users thanked A Kurdziel for this useful post.
Mikeehall88 on 25/04/2023(UTC), HSSnail on 25/04/2023(UTC)
Mark-W  
#7 Posted : 25 April 2023 07:15:15(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Mark-W

I have a new client who makes high end kitchens. They recently had a visit from the HSE, no particular reason given, no complaints from anyone. Seemingly just a random visit.

Anyway, when the assessor came she picked up a few things, the deep clean not being conducted thoriughly enough, a bit of sawdust residue on high up extraction ducting, hoover filters not being changed regular enough and the fact that there was no scoring matrix on the RA.

We remedied all the points straight away but I questioned the scoring matrix and she said she liked them and thats what shed prefer to see. To keep the HSE happy and away from their premises, my client has now had to amend the format of all their RA to include a scoring matrix.

So despite the HSE not officially advocating them, some inspectors do.

If it wasn't the fact that it could cause a whole world of hurt for my client I'd of fought it it a bit more, but it's never good to be on the radar of the HSE

thanks 2 users thanked Mark-W for this useful post.
Mikeehall88 on 25/04/2023(UTC), Kate on 25/04/2023(UTC)
achrn  
#8 Posted : 25 April 2023 07:32:26(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
achrn

Originally Posted by: Mark-W Go to Quoted Post

So despite the HSE not officially advocating them, some inspectors do.

The trouble with pandering to the whims of individuals is that they become contradictory.  I've not had it from HSE inspectors, but I get it from auditors - they (personally) want something one way, if you change it to that way the next one is liable to want it different and you change it back again.

Personally, advocating a risk assessment format that is contrary to every piece of HSE guidance on the topic is something I wouldn't do.

(I also don't like 1-5 x 1-5 for all the reasons set out up the thread. We have some clients that demand it, however, and then we do it 'our' way and also prepare something to let them tick their boxes).

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Mikeehall88 on 25/04/2023(UTC), Roundtuit on 25/04/2023(UTC)
Kate  
#9 Posted : 25 April 2023 08:39:40(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Kate

I had one auditor who said "Don't you think it would be easier to score the risk both before and after controls instead of just after them?"

To which I said "No, I don't think that would be easier" and ignored the suggestion.

Mikeehall88  
#10 Posted : 25 April 2023 09:01:10(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
Mikeehall88

Originally Posted by: Kate Go to Quoted Post

I had one auditor who said "Don't you think it would be easier to score the risk both before and after controls instead of just after them?"

To which I said "No, I don't think that would be easier" and ignored the suggestion.

Interestingly key to my question that is what is currently being done in my organisation. Having just completed NEBOSH i  find it hard as the standard you are taught is as per the HSE guidance with no scoring matrix.

A Kurdziel  
#11 Posted : 25 April 2023 09:18:02(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
A Kurdziel

So, Mark, did you challenge the HSE inspector? Did you ask that they produce evidence that their approach was the correct one? And finally, what happens if the next time  the inspector is one those ie most that positively hate matrices  and the make you change all of your paper work again ( which they have no right to do)

In the past if an inspector has asked for something stupid, I have simply ignored that request. They never followed it up.

thanks 2 users thanked A Kurdziel for this useful post.
HSSnail on 25/04/2023(UTC), peter gotch on 25/04/2023(UTC)
HSSnail  
#12 Posted : 25 April 2023 09:35:36(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
HSSnail

When working as an inspector i never bothered if scored or not - as long as the controls looked sensible thats all i was looking at. There is no right or wrong was to document a risk assessment. For very small companies we were even told to accept method statements if all the information looked to be there without any thing entitled Risk Assessment. 

Personaly i dont like scoreing - for all the reasons others have said. 

thanks 2 users thanked HSSnail for this useful post.
A Kurdziel on 26/04/2023(UTC), JohnW on 26/04/2023(UTC)
peter gotch  
#13 Posted : 25 April 2023 10:19:58(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Mark - whilst I agree (as a former HSE Inspector) that it's not good to upset an HSE Inspector it is also entirely justified to challenge them when you think they are wrong!

thanks 2 users thanked peter gotch for this useful post.
A Kurdziel on 26/04/2023(UTC), JohnW on 26/04/2023(UTC)
firesafety101  
#14 Posted : 25 April 2023 11:52:48(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
firesafety101

Originally Posted by: A Kurdziel Go to Quoted Post

So, Mark, did you challenge the HSE inspector? Did you ask that they produce evidence that their approach was the correct one? And finally, what happens if the next time  the inspector is one those ie most that positively hate matrices  and the make you change all of your paper work again ( which they have no right to do)

In the past if an inspector has asked for something stupid, I have simply ignored that request. They never followed it up.

How does anyone know that "something is stupid".
firesafety101  
#15 Posted : 25 April 2023 11:59:08(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
firesafety101

Welcome Mike, I've used the assessment matrix for longer than I can remember, mine is a 9 x 9 matrix.

When I 'assist' workers with their risk assessments on site I show them what I do and work through the numbers with them.  The calculations make it easier for them to understand the final result and reasoning behind the precautions and how they can make the risks smaller.

I say 'assist' because I believe workers should carry out their own risk assessments, that way they have read and understood the risk assessments.

I hope your first visit here has been a positive one.

thanks 1 user thanked firesafety101 for this useful post.
Mikeehall88 on 27/04/2023(UTC)
peter gotch  
#16 Posted : 26 April 2023 12:20:21(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Re my comments at #4, an illustration of how difficult it is to put a number to the population at risk and how long they may be at risk for:

Teenager fell more than 20 feet through roof of Bodmin dairy farm (shponline.co.uk)

OK this person survived but the narrative reminds me of one of the first roofing fatalities I investigated.

Some of you don't remember the days before a PC, laptop or tablet was a ubiquitous feature of the working environment, but in ye olden days the new fangled very expensive computer in a factory was getting wet due to a leak in the roof.

So, they sent a teenager up on the roof at 10pm in October to sort out the problem, which in simple terms was pigeon guano and feathers blocking the drains.

So, up he goes armed with bin bag and gloves and down he fell straight through a sheet of asbestos cement.

This person was never in a month of Sundays  going to be be officially classified as a "roofer", any more than the Devon farmworker.

Just another person happening to find themselves working on a roof to do something entirely different from their normal job.

In BOTH cases a simple risk assessment WITHOUT playing numbers games would have said "BAD NEWS".

P

A Kurdziel  
#17 Posted : 26 April 2023 15:22:17(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
A Kurdziel

FireSafety

Example of stupid reaction from a HSE inspector: We had a containment  level 3 laboratory, which could be fumigated  with formaldehyde. A fairly sophisticated system controlled the fumigation process and was supposed to ensure that when the lab was full of formaldehyde gas it was under negative  pressure and sending any fumigant up the exhaust stack. Once, because of a software glitch  it didn’t and some employees were exposure  to the fumigant. We reported it under  RIDDOR and the supplier corrected the software fault. The HSE inspector arrived months later after all of this had happened and asked to see the system. We explained what had happened and how we had fixed it and how this could never happen again.  He saw us demonstrate  the system but he could not get their head around the fact that the process could be controlled from a laptop. When he sent us his report a few weeks later he told us we needed to install an old fashioned control panel to manage the fumigation process. It would cost thousands to install such a panel. We could not see how this might improve the situation so we decided that this was a stupid suggestion and ignored it.  Nothing happened.  

thanks 1 user thanked A Kurdziel for this useful post.
peter gotch on 26/04/2023(UTC)
Kate  
#18 Posted : 26 April 2023 16:45:39(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Kate

Originally Posted by: O'Donnell54548 Go to Quoted Post

I have found, over the years, that it is quite good when used to compare risk scores with/without controls, giving some indication of the effectiveness of your control measures. The problem often occurs when a control which reduces likelyhood brings down the score for consequence, and vice versa. However this can be addressed through eduaction. 

So it would appear, as is often the case with H&S, that it is down to your individual needs/wants. 

Aargh!  Too right about the problem.  I have wasted a fair amount of time in addressing just this issue of reducing the consequence instead of the likelihood, even though I don't care what the risk rating is!

firesafety101  
#19 Posted : 27 April 2023 11:07:04(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
firesafety101

Originally Posted by: A Kurdziel Go to Quoted Post

FireSafety

Example of stupid reaction from a HSE inspector: We had a containment  level 3 laboratory, which could be fumigated  with formaldehyde. A fairly sophisticated system controlled the fumigation process and was supposed to ensure that when the lab was full of formaldehyde gas it was under negative  pressure and sending any fumigant up the exhaust stack. Once, because of a software glitch  it didn’t and some employees were exposure  to the fumigant. We reported it under  RIDDOR and the supplier corrected the software fault. The HSE inspector arrived months later after all of this had happened and asked to see the system. We explained what had happened and how we had fixed it and how this could never happen again.  He saw us demonstrate  the system but he could not get their head around the fact that the process could be controlled from a laptop. When he sent us his report a few weeks later he told us we needed to install an old fashioned control panel to manage the fumigation process. It would cost thousands to install such a panel. We could not see how this might improve the situation so we decided that this was a stupid suggestion and ignored it.  Nothing happened.  

Did you inform the HSE your opinion about the suggestion being stupid and what was their response.  It may have been a simple suggestion bu someone who has very little faith in computers and likes the "old" ways of controlling hazards.  Would his suggestion work?

Stupid is defined as "having or showing a great lack ofi ntelligence or common sense ("Oxford languages").

A Kurdziel  
#20 Posted : 27 April 2023 11:41:57(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
A Kurdziel

The conversation with the HSE inspector went along the following lines:

Inspector: “Oh, where is the control panel?”

Us: “There isn’t one, we  control it from a laptop in the office”

Inspector: “So why don’t you have a control panel?”

Us: “We don’t need one we can control everything from the laptop. Look is does everything that the control panel would do.”

Inspector: “What if the laptop breaks down?”

Us: “What if  the panel fails?”

Inspector: “Hmmm…”

 

So, we left it there. No indication as to why he thought the panel was better than a laptop or exactly what legal requirements we had not complied with. There was just this impression that he didn’t like the laptop.

We were surprised that he mentioned it in his report and since we had spent all of budget we decided not to waste taxpayer’s installing an unnecessary item.

 

thanks 1 user thanked A Kurdziel for this useful post.
peter gotch on 27/04/2023(UTC)
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