Part 7: Risk Management Flashcards
Risk identification is the process of identifying hazard and sources of risks. When an organization is determining possible risks they:
A) should include only risks that they have control over
B) should include only those risks that are obvious and currently known
C) should include all possible risks, using many risk identification tools
D) should only come up with a list of no more than 3-5 risks or hazards.
C) should include all possible risks, using many risk identification tools
The key stakeholders, strategy, and program objectives, as well as development of roles and responsibilities, are typically identified and agreed on in the:
A) risk management planning
B) risk identification phase
C) risk prioritization phase
D) risk assessment
A) risk management planning
In a risk analysis, the likelihood and consequences of risk are combined to determine the risk level for a particular risk. The purpose of risk evaluation is to:
A) make decisions based on risk level compared to stated risk criteria
B) determine options for modifying risks
C) decide whether risk levels are acceptable
D) evaluate and possibly change the consequences
A) make decisions based on risk level compared to stated risk criteria
A risk mitigation plan can be used to:
A) eliminate risk
B) minimize risk
C) accept the risk as is
D) all of the above
D) all of the above
If the response to a particular risk is to attempt to minimize its impact this is known as:
A) avoidance
B) transfer
C) mitigation
D) denial
C) mitigation
Results of risk evaluation must be:
A) quantitative only
B) qualitative only
C) subjective
D) qualitative or quantitative
D) qualitative or quantitative
The process of comparing the results of a risk analysis that has been completed to the stated risk criteria put in place is:
A) risk reduction
B) risk identification
C) risk evaluation
D) None of the above
C) risk evaluation
Risk assessment consists of the following
A) risk identification, analysis, and control
B) risk identification, analysis, and evaluation
C) risk identification, reduction, and evaluation
D) risk reduction, risk criteria, and evaluation
B) risk identification, analysis, and evaluation
A risk assessment tool that is based on expert opinion is the:
A) checklist
B) Delphi method
C) flowchart
D) FMEA
B) Delphi method
A failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) is a useful tool for prioritizing risks. One of the drawbacks or limitations of the FMEA is that:
A) it can not be used to identify combinations of failure modes, only single failure modes.
B) it does not aid in identifying possible root causes.
C) it is too complicated since it does not require the user to know anything about he process or product
D) None of the above
A) it can not be used to identify combinations of failure modes, only single failure modes.
Two components of risk estimation are:
A) severity and consequence
B) probability of occurrence and severity
C) probability of occurrence and risk
D) None of the above
B) probability of occurrence and severity
Qualitative evaluation involves categories such as catastrophic, critical, major, minor, and negligible, which represent:
A) probabilities of reoccurrence
B) likelihood of occurrence
C) severity
D) risk priority number
C) severity
Consider the following empty table (Probability X Severity)
Probability Severity Low Medium High Low Medium High
This table is an example of a(n):
A) flowchart
B) FMEA
C) Severity categorization matrix
D) risk matrix
D) risk matrix
The numerical metric that is an output from an FMEA is the:
A) risk priority number
B) significance level
C) capability index
D) supplier index
A) risk priority number
Which of the following risk assessment tools is a top-down approach to failure mode analysis?
A) FMEA
B) FMECA
C) FTA
D) None of the above
C) FTA