The evidence

What the research shows

Independent studies consistently find that structured, well-implemented risk control produces measurable reductions in claims and cost.

OSHA 3885 · Ohio BWC, 2011

Structured safety programs (OSHA SHARP)

Small employers that worked with OSHA's SHARP program to adopt structured safety and health programs saw dramatic workers' compensation improvements.

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52%
fewer claims on average
80%
lower cost per claim
87%
less lost time per claim
88%
fewer claims per $M of payroll
Wurzelbacher et al., 2014

Insurer-supported engineering controls

A 2014 study of insurer-supported engineering control interventions found large reductions for affected employees — evidence that specific, well-implemented risk control produces measurable claim and cost reductions.

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66%
lower total claim frequency
78%
lower lost-time claim frequency
81%
lower paid cost per employee
CDC Stacks · NIOSH, 2022

State insurer onsite risk control services

A 2022 study compared employers that received a state workers' comp insurer's onsite risk control visits with matched employers that did not. Cost rates fell, and the impact accumulated up to the fourth visit — broader evidence beyond a single intervention type.

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workers' comp cost rates
4 visits
where cumulative impact peaked

The framework behind the evidence

Safety improvement is a process, not an inspection

OSHA’s Recommended Practices for Safety and Health Programs provide a public framework for proactive safety management — and the basis for much of the evidence above.

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OSHA Recommended Practices

Seven core elements of an effective safety and health program — continuous improvement, not a one-time visit.

Management leadership Worker participation Hazard identification & assessment Hazard prevention & control Education & training Program evaluation & improvement Communication & coordination

What we're exploring

Open questions for the next wave of research

Where the evidence is thinnest — and where Loss Control Labs wants to help build it.

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Research gaps

The questions the industry most needs answered next.

Digital loss control adoption Policyholder-led risk assessments Recommendation completion rates Which recommendations improve risk most How risk control affects retention How transparency affects engagement How AI-supported guidance affects implementation How dashboards change underwriting decisions How to attribute outcome improvements The economics of broader, tech-enabled reach

Planned writing from this research

  • Loss Control Has a Measurement Problem
  • From Inspection to Implementation
  • The Case for Policyholder-Facing Risk Reports
  • Engineering Controls and the Economics of Risk Improvement
  • Why Recommendation Completion Should Be a Core Carrier Metric
  • What Every Carrier Should Report About Loss Control
  • Risk Control Is Not a Cost Center If You Measure It Correctly