GOVERNANCE AND EVIDENCE
Prove your psychosocial compliance systematically, on demand
Prove your psychosocial compliance systematically, on demand
Prove your psychosocial compliance systematically, on demand
Your board asks for a psychosocial risk report. A regulator requests evidence of systematic action. An officer needs to demonstrate due diligence. The answer to all three should already be structured, time-stamped, and ready.

How governance and evidence works
How your organisation proves it acted systematically
uNIVERSAL BENEFITS
How your organisation proves it acted systematically
How governance and evidence works
How your organisation proves it acted systematically
Reporting and Reviews
Audits and Evidence

Generate psychosocial risk reports for your board in minutes
Board-ready psychosocial risk reports, compliance summaries, and trend analysis generated from live data in minutes. Review and approval workflows ensure sign-off before distribution.
Reporting and Reviews
Audits and Evidence

Generate psychosocial risk reports for your board in minutes
Board-ready psychosocial risk reports, compliance summaries, and trend analysis generated from live data in minutes. Review and approval workflows ensure sign-off before distribution.
Built for psychosocial governance
Governance that runs continuously, not when the auditor calls
The evidence trail builds as your organisation identifies hazards, implements controls, and conducts reviews. Governance is a natural output of the system running, not a retrospective exercise.
No more retrospective evidence assembly.
No more governance gaps between audit cycles.


The psychosocial operating system
End-to-end traceability from identification to governance
Every hazard identified in risk intelligence flows through controls in safety orchestration and resolves here. The audit trail is continuous and the evidence is already structured when you need it.
What this enables
Trace any hazard from identification through control to governance
Produce regulator-aligned evidence packs for inspections
Generate board-ready reports from live data
Demonstrate officer due diligence with time-stamped records
GOT QUESTIONS?
Frequently asked questions
Frequently asked questions
What does "control" actually mean in this context?
A control is any action your organisation takes to eliminate or minimise a psychosocial hazard. Controls follow a hierarchy: * Elimination: remove the hazard entirely (e.g. removing an unsafe process). * Substitution: replace the hazard with something less risky. * Engineering: redesign the work environment or systems. * Administrative: introduce policies, training, or changed procedures (e.g. workload caps, flexible arrangements, conflict resolution training). * Personal support: provide individual-level support such as EAP referrals or coaching. ReFresh helps you document which controls you have implemented for each risk, track whether they are being followed, record the evidence, and schedule reviews to check whether they are working.
How does ReFresh Control work?
ReFresh Control provides a structured control library, hierarchy-based selection, control to risk linkages, rationale documentation, and ownership tracking. This ensures controls are applied consistently and remain reviewable over time.
What does a control look like in practice?
Controls are practical actions, not just policies on paper. Here are examples for common psychosocial hazard categories: * Job demands/workload: implementing workload review processes, redistributing tasks across the team, introducing overtime caps, or redesigning peak period scheduling. * Bullying and harassment: training managers to identify and respond to early warning signs, establishing clear reporting pathways, and conducting regular check-ins with affected teams. * Organisational change: running structured consultation sessions before restructures, providing transition support, and maintaining clear communication timelines. * Remote or isolated work: establishing regular check-in schedules, providing access to peer support, and conducting risk assessments for isolated roles. ReFresh includes a control library with pre-built templates for each hazard category that you can adapt to your organisation's context.
Why is documenting control rationale important?
Regulators and boards expect organisations to demonstrate not only what controls exist, but why they were chosen and how they are maintained. Control rationale documentation ensures decisions are transparent and defensible.
How does ReFresh track control effectiveness?
Controls are linked to specific psychosocial hazards and designated as primary or secondary measures. Over time, organisations can review which control types are most effective for different risk scenarios.
How do we know if our controls are actually working?
ReFresh tracks control effectiveness through multiple signals: * Review schedules: every control has a scheduled review date. When the review comes due, the platform prompts the assigned owner to assess whether the control is still effective. * Survey data trends: if you implement a control for workload and subsequent survey results show improvement in that hazard category, you have evidence the control is working. * Incident data: a reduction in incidents related to a specific hazard after implementing a control supports its effectiveness. * Worker feedback: consultation records capture whether workers feel the controls are making a difference. Regulators want to see that you are not just implementing controls but reviewing whether they work. ReFresh makes that review cycle part of the system rather than something you have to remember to do manually.
GOT QUESTIONS?
Frequently asked questions
What does "control" actually mean in this context?
A control is any action your organisation takes to eliminate or minimise a psychosocial hazard. Controls follow a hierarchy: * Elimination: remove the hazard entirely (e.g. removing an unsafe process). * Substitution: replace the hazard with something less risky. * Engineering: redesign the work environment or systems. * Administrative: introduce policies, training, or changed procedures (e.g. workload caps, flexible arrangements, conflict resolution training). * Personal support: provide individual-level support such as EAP referrals or coaching. ReFresh helps you document which controls you have implemented for each risk, track whether they are being followed, record the evidence, and schedule reviews to check whether they are working.
How does ReFresh Control work?
ReFresh Control provides a structured control library, hierarchy-based selection, control to risk linkages, rationale documentation, and ownership tracking. This ensures controls are applied consistently and remain reviewable over time.
What does a control look like in practice?
Controls are practical actions, not just policies on paper. Here are examples for common psychosocial hazard categories: * Job demands/workload: implementing workload review processes, redistributing tasks across the team, introducing overtime caps, or redesigning peak period scheduling. * Bullying and harassment: training managers to identify and respond to early warning signs, establishing clear reporting pathways, and conducting regular check-ins with affected teams. * Organisational change: running structured consultation sessions before restructures, providing transition support, and maintaining clear communication timelines. * Remote or isolated work: establishing regular check-in schedules, providing access to peer support, and conducting risk assessments for isolated roles. ReFresh includes a control library with pre-built templates for each hazard category that you can adapt to your organisation's context.
Why is documenting control rationale important?
Regulators and boards expect organisations to demonstrate not only what controls exist, but why they were chosen and how they are maintained. Control rationale documentation ensures decisions are transparent and defensible.
How does ReFresh track control effectiveness?
Controls are linked to specific psychosocial hazards and designated as primary or secondary measures. Over time, organisations can review which control types are most effective for different risk scenarios.
How do we know if our controls are actually working?
ReFresh tracks control effectiveness through multiple signals: * Review schedules: every control has a scheduled review date. When the review comes due, the platform prompts the assigned owner to assess whether the control is still effective. * Survey data trends: if you implement a control for workload and subsequent survey results show improvement in that hazard category, you have evidence the control is working. * Incident data: a reduction in incidents related to a specific hazard after implementing a control supports its effectiveness. * Worker feedback: consultation records capture whether workers feel the controls are making a difference. Regulators want to see that you are not just implementing controls but reviewing whether they work. ReFresh makes that review cycle part of the system rather than something you have to remember to do manually.
Don't just measure risk. Prevent it
Bring emotional, psychosocial, and leadership risk into one unified framework.


Don't just measure risk. Prevent it
Bring emotional, psychosocial, and leadership risk into one unified framework.


Don't just measure risk. Prevent it
Bring emotional, psychosocial, and leadership risk into one unified framework.




