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It is widely recognised within the National Animal Health System
that the efficient and effective deployment of available animal health
resources and skills requires that there be a shared view of the
priority of the various issues to be addressed and that the available
resources should be deployed to issues in order of their priority.
It
is also widely accepted that issues should be prioritised on the basis
of the risk they pose to Australia's animal health status and access to
markets. What has been lacking within the Australian animal health
system is a commonly agreed process for assessing risk and therefore
assigning priorities to the various issues facing the system.
To
address this deficiency, Animal Health Australia commissioned Impact
Consulting Group in 2004 to develop a risk assessment process that
could be applied across the animal health system to evaluate and manage
risk and to assign priorities.
The process developed by Impact
Consulting Group is based very heavily on the Australian Standard for
Risk Management AS 4360 and follows the process steps defined therein:
1. Establish the context
2. Identify risk
3. Analyse risk
4. Evaluate risk
5. Determine risk treatment
6. Monitor and review
7. Communicate and consult
In
its development, the process was thoroughly tested in the course of
pilot studies undertaken with the cooperation of NSW Department of
Primary Industries and Primary Industries and Resources South Australia
and has subsequently been applied to a number of studies undertaken by
Animal Health Australia.
A focus of the pilot studies was the
relevance and applicability of the process to the assessment of
jurisdictional conformance with the National Animal Health Performance
Standards. It is apparent from these studies that the process has
application to the assessment of performance against the standards; the
development of actions to address any deficiencies revealed in the
assessment process and to the auditing of compliance with the
Performance Standards.
Animal Health Australia encourages
stakeholders in the Australian animal health system to use the National
Animal Health Risk Assessment Process in evaluating the animal health
risks associated with their activities; to identify opportunities for
improving performance and for prioritising the application of available
resources.
Click here to view the
User Manual for the National Animal Health Risk Management Process (974 KB)
Page Updated: 1 July 2005
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