Active Risk Control Toolkit: Better Solutions After Risk Assessment

 

ARC_Toolkit_cover130x96.jpg

 

The ARC toolkit was developed by 2012 ASHRM Research Grant Recipient, Alan Card, PhD, MPH, CPH, CPHQ.

With the adoption of risk assessment tools like root cause analysis (RCA) and failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA), health care organizations have become much more effective at diagnosing the systems failures that lead to adverse outcomes. But there is no evidence that this improved diagnosis has translated into improved outcomes. Why? One reason is that there have been no tools to provide the same kind of support for prescribing the right treatments (developing effective risk control recommendations). Until now.

The ARC Toolkit is designed to solve this problem by providing the same kind of structured approach to risk control that RCA and FMEA provide for risk assessment. Use of the ARC Toolkit is associated with the development of stronger risk control recommendations compared to current practice. Users in the ASHRM-funded research study found the Toolkit useful, reasonably easy to use, and valuable. Most said they would use the toolkit again in the same or similar circumstances. The ARC Toolkit is available for free under a Creative Commons License.

For members only.

Download

 

Related Resources

On-Demand Educational Webinars
An overview of workers’ compensation claims in health care settings and recommendations for return to work programs to limit exposure.
On-Demand Educational Webinars
Learn about the evolving catastrophic cyber risk strategies Cyber Insurers have deployed, with a special focus on the recently updated War Exclusions…
ASHRM News
This white paper series promotes awareness, addresses the need for authentic conversations and insights, and ideally encourages sustainable changes…
On-Demand Educational Webinars
The 2022 Health Care Risk Management Professional of the Year talks about professional growth, mentorship and how to become an award-winning risk…
On-Demand Educational Webinars
Learn how to get involved in speaking opportunities, writing opportunities, and the chance to earn respected designations via ASHRM.
Magazine & Journal Articles
Earn 1 Continuing Education Credit with JHRM article "Violence in the Health Care Workplace and ERM Solutions."