According to Health Care Risk Management standards supported by ASHRM and enterprise risk management ERM principles, external factors include conditions outside the direct control of the organization that influence strategic, operational, financial, and regulatory risk exposures.
A physician shortage is an external workforce market condition that can affect staffing stability, access to care, and malpractice exposure. New regulations are also external factors, as legislative or regulatory changes may alter compliance requirements, reimbursement structures, or reporting obligations. Similarly, soft insurance market trends reflect external economic and underwriting environments that influence premium pricing, availability of coverage, and risk financing strategy.
Resolution of claims, however, is generally an internal operational or claims management outcome. While influenced by external legal environments, the resolution process itself is primarily part of internal risk management and litigation strategy rather than a broad external environmental factor.
ERM objectives emphasize analysis of external environmental drivers, including regulatory, workforce, economic, and market conditions. Therefore, physician shortages, new regulations, and soft insurance market trends are external factors affecting risk, while resolution of claims is not primarily classified as external.