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How Risk Levels Are Calculated
Look across four criteria at each location to understand the current operating conditions and risks.
By default, the Workplace Strategy Planner dashboard displays the risk level at each location along these criteria.
- Medical trends
- Business priority
- Government guidance
- Employee data
It also displays the overall risk level and weekly trends at each location.
To determine if a location is at a high, medium, or low risk level, Workplace Strategy Planner evaluates the current data for each metric against the opening and closing thresholds values, and aggregates the results into criteria. The collective criteria results are then used to calculate the overall risk level for a location.
- A location is considered low risk when all metrics in all criteria reach or surpass the opening threshold values.
- A location is considered high risk when one metric in any criterion reaches or surpasses the closing threshold value
- A location is considered medium risk under any other conditions.
For example, if at the location called San Francisco Office, the values for all medical trend metrics reach the opening thresholds, the medical trends criterion is low risk. If the government guidance, business priorities, and employee data criteria also all reach low risk, then the San Francisco Office location is considered low risk.
Any other data values in any metrics move the San Francisco Office to either high or medium risk. For example, if the value for any metric reaches the closing threshold value, the criterion and the San Francisco Office location move to high risk. The San Francisco Offices is at medium risk when individual metrics are a mix of medium and low risk.

