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Lecture 10. Risk Analysis And New Innovations. What is a Risk?. “Something with the potential to cause harm”. MAINTAINING THE HSE CORPORATE RISK REGISTER Guidance Document. The Risk Register enables the HSE to Assess its key risks and determine its priorities
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Lecture 10 Risk Analysis And New Innovations
What is a Risk? “Something with the potential to cause harm”
MAINTAINING THE HSE CORPORATE RISKREGISTERGuidance Document The Risk Register enables the HSE to • Assess its key risks and determine its priorities • Develop the HSE Corporate and National Service Plans based on the organisation’s most important priorities and development needs. • Anticipate likely areas of impact and mitigate where possible up to and including transferring resource from lesser priorities. • Track the management response to identified risks. • Communicate the HSE risk profile to stakeholders including DoH&C • Inform audit planning process,
Risk Management • Risk management is the identification, assessment, and prioritization of risks (defined in ISO 31000 • It is defined as the effect of uncertainty on objectives, whether positive or negative) • Followed by coordinated and economical application of resources to minimize, monitor, and control the probability and/or impact of unfortunate events or to maximize the realization of opportunities.
Developing and Populating a Risk Register Best Practice Guidance Revision booklet prepared by the HSE Office of Quality & Risk to aid a service to establish a direction for managing its risks. • The risk register consequently provides managers with a high level overview of the services’ risk status at a particular point in time and becomes a dynamic tool for the monitoring of actions to be taken to mitigate risk. • This guidance is in line with the AS/NZS 4360:2004 Standard and is consistent with best practice
What is risk assessment • The process of identifying, assessing, and reducing risks to an acceptable level • Defines and controls threats and vulnerabilities • Implements risk reduction measures • Three elements to risk …. • Risk assessment: determine what the risks are • Risk management: evaluating alternatives for mitigating the risk • Risk communication: presenting this material in an understandable way to decision makers and/or the public
Risk Analysis • Risk comprises two components: the likelihood of the occurrence of harm the consequences of that harm. • In the home, the social and psychological harms are as important as the physical ones. • The importance of the harm (e.g., injury) is conditioned by its consequences (e.g., distress, costly medical treatment).
In assistive technology risk Management is the protection of user • AT is primarily about promotion of health and alleviation of disability – • your first responsibility is not to make things worse… BS EN ISO 14971:2007
AT devices - Application of risk management to AT devicesSome key concepts • Risk management plan • Risk analysis process • Identification of hazards • Estimation of the risk(s) for eachhazardous situation • Risk evaluation • Risk control • It’s a process that runs through all your activities
generic types of harm (GTH) and • generic consequences (including distress and loss of confidence in ability to live independently). • The resultant client-centred framework offers a systematic basis for selecting and evaluating technology for independent living. “Towards a practical framework for managing the risks of selecting technology to support independent living” Andrew Monk, Kate Hone,,Lorna Lines, Alan Dowdall, Gordon Baxter, Mark Blythe and Peter Wright
Physical • injury (physical damage to the person occurring on a short time scale) • untreated medical condition (physical damage to the person occurring on a medium time scale due to a delay in receiving medical treatment) • physical deterioration (physical damage to the person occurring on a long time scale)
Psychological and social • Dependency (reduction in perceived personal worth due to dependency on technology or carers) • loneliness (unwanted isolation from the community) • fear (of attack, robbery etc.) • debt (poverty)
Consequences • distress (pain, fear and worry) • loss of confidence in ability to live independently on the part of the person or the people who care for them • costly medical treatment • death
Define objectives of risk analysis and the scope of the system evaluated;• Risk Analysis of current situation;• Risk analysis of planned system;• Risk analysis post-installation
The Mobile Lorm Glove, a prototype created by a lab in the University of Arts Berlin, transmits the touch alphabet used by some people who are both deaf and blind, called Lorm. http://www.psfk.com/2012/04/glove-deaf-blind-texting.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/03/science/ibrain-a-device-that-can-read-thoughts.htmlhttp://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/03/science/ibrain-a-device-that-can-read-thoughts.html
New system allows robots to continuously map their environment. http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2012/simultaneous-localization-mapping-kinect-0216.html
The Blind Climber Who "Sees" With His Tongue http://discovermagazine.com/2008/jul/23-the-blind-climber-who-sees-through-his-tongue
Google driverless car The system combines information gathered from Google Street View with artificial intelligence software that combines input from video cameras inside the car, a LIDAR sensor on top of the vehicle, radar sensors on the front of the vehicle and a position sensor attached to one of the rear wheels that helps locate the car's position on the map http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=peDy2st2XpQ&feature=youtu.be