Dr. Ayers explains the 4×4 Risk Assessment Matrix, a simplified version of the more common 5×5 tool. The episode focuses on how reducing the scoring options can actually improve consistency, reduce over‑precision, and make risk conversations more meaningful.
The matrix evaluates hazards using Severity and Likelihood, each scored from 1 to 4.
1 – Minor: First aid only
2 – Moderate: Recordable injury
3 – Serious: Lost time or significant medical treatment
4 – Severe/Catastrophic: Permanent disability or fatality
1 – Rare: Unlikely to occur
2 – Possible: Could happen occasionally
3 – Likely: Happens regularly
4 – Almost Certain: Expected to occur
Risk Score = Severity × Likelihood Range: 1 to 16, typically grouped into low, medium, high, and critical.
Dr. Ayers highlights several advantages:
Less false precision Fewer scoring options reduce the illusion that risk scoring is scientific.
More consistent scoring Teams tend to agree more often when there are fewer choices.
Faster assessments Useful for dynamic or field‑level risk evaluations.
Better focus on discussion The conversation becomes more important than the number.
Even with a simpler matrix, leaders can misuse it:
Treating the score as absolute truth It’s still an estimate, not a measurement.
Failing to consider exposure frequency Likelihood must reflect how often workers interact with the hazard.
Not rescoring after controls Controls should reduce likelihood, not severity.
Using the matrix to justify inaction “It’s only an 8, so we’re fine” is not leadership.
Reduces bias and improves accuracy.
Not the most likely outcome—the worst plausible one.
Why you chose a score matters more than the number.
Shows whether risk was actually reduced.
High‑severity hazards deserve attention even if likelihood is low.
Strong safety leaders:
Use the matrix to drive action, not avoid it
Encourage open hazard discussions
Treat risk scoring as dynamic
Focus on engineering and administrative controls
Communicate risk clearly to frontline teams and executives
Unprotected elevated work platform:
Severity: 4 (severe)
Likelihood: 2 (possible)
Risk Score: 8 (medium/high depending on scale)
After installing guardrails and requiring fall protection:
Severity: 4 (unchanged)
Likelihood: 1 (rare)
New Score: 4 (low)
This reinforces the principle: controls reduce likelihood, not severity.