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Photo: “Tulalip Bay” by Diane L. Wilson-Simon
ACCIDENT & INJURY
PREVENTION
Instructor: Kerrie Murphy
Edmonds Community College
This course is being supported under grant number
SH16637SH7 from the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor. It does not
necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Department
of Labor, nor does mention of trade names, commercial
products, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S.
Government.
With Thanks to & Cooperation of the Tulalip Occupational
Safety & Health Administration (TOSHA)
Introduction & Course Overview
PROaction versus REaction
• “Well that’s an accident
waiting to happen…”
• “Someone ought to do
something…”
That someone is YOU!
Accident
Prevention
What Is An Accident?
What Is An Accident?
An Accident is:
• a. An unexpected and undesirable event, especially one
resulting in damage or harm: car accidents on icy roads.
• b. An unforeseen incident: A series of happy accidents led
to his promotion.
• c. An instance of involuntary urination or defecation in
one's clothing.
• 2. Lack of intention; chance: ran into an old friend by
accident.
• 3. Logic A circumstance or attribute that is not essential to
the nature of something.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/accident
Hazard
• Existing or Potential
Condition That
Alone or Interacting
With Other Factors
Can Cause Harm
• A Spill on the Floor
• Broken Equipment
Risk
• A measure of the probability and
severity of a hazard to harm human
health, property, or the environment
• A measure of how likely harm is to
occur and an indication of how serious
the harm might be
RiskRisk ≠≠ 00
Safety
FREEDOM FROM DANGER OR HARM
Nothing is Free of
BUT - We can almost always make
something SAFER
Safety Is Better Defined As….
A Judgement of the
Acceptability of Risk
R
A
T
I
O
S
OSHA METHOD
330 Incidents
29 Minor Injuries
1 Major or Loss-Time Accident
Candy Jar
Example
Types of Accidents
• FALL TO
– same level
– lower level
• CAUGHT
– in
– on
– between
• CONTACT WITH
– chemicals
– electricity
– heat/cold
– radiation
• BODILY
REACTION FROM
– voluntary motion
– involuntary motion
Types of Accidents (continued)
• STRUCK
– Against
• stationary or moving
object
• protruding object
• sharp or jagged edge
– By
• moving or flying
object
• falling object
• RUBBED OR
ABRADED BY
– friction
– pressure
– vibration
Fatal Accidents - Workplace
U.S. WORKPLACE FATALITIES - 2006
1. Vehicle Accidents 2413
2. Contact With Objects and Equipment 983
3. Falls 809
4. Assaults & Violent Acts 754
Fatal Accidents - Workplace
Washington State FATALITIES - 2006
1. Vehicle Accidents 40
2. Contact With Objects and Equipment 13
3. Falls 19
4. Assaults & Violent Acts 4
NO NOTE: If you wish to normalize or compare the
Washington data with the Federal data, just multiply the
Washington numbers by 47 (based on population)
Accident Causing Factors
• Basic Causes
– Management
– Environmental
– Equipment
– Human Behavior
• Indirect Causes
– Unsafe Acts
– Unsafe Conditions
• Direct Causes
– Slips, Trips, Falls
– Caught In
– Run Over
– Chemical Exposure
Policy & Procedures
Environmental Conditions
Equipment/Plant Design
Human Behavior
Slip/Trip Fall
Energy Release
Pinched Between
Indirect Causes
Direct Causes
ACCIDENTACCIDENT
Personal Injury
Property Damage
Potential/Actual
Basic Causes
Unsafe
Acts
Unsafe
Conditions
Basic Causes
• Management
• Environment
• Equipment
• Human Behavior
Systems & Procedures
Natural & Man-made
Design & Equipment
Management
• Systems &
Procedures
– Lack of systems &
procedures
– Availability
– Lack of Supervision
Environment
• Physical
– Lighting
– Temperature
• Chemical
– vapors
– smoke
• Biological
–Bacteria
–Reptiles
Environment
Design and Equipment
• Design
– Workplace layout
– Design of tools &
equipment
– Maintenance
Design and Equipment
• Equipment
– Suitability
– Stability
• Guarding
• Ergonomic
• Accessibility
Human Behavior
Common to
all accidents
Not limited to person
involved in accident
Human Factors
• Omissions &
Commissions
• Deviations from
SOP
– Lacking Authority
– Short Cuts
– Remove guards
Competencies (how it needs to be done)
Human Behavior is a function of :
Activators (what needs to be done)
Consequences
(what happens if it is/isn’t done)
ABC Model
Antecedents
(trigger behavior)
Behavior
(human performance)
Consequences
(either reinforce or punish behavior)
•Positive Reinforcement (R+)
("Do this & you'll be rewarded")
•Negative Reinforcement (R-)
("Do this or else you'll be penalized")
Only 4 Types of
Consequences:
Behavior
•Punishment (P)
("If you do this, you'll be penalized")
•Extinction (E)
("Ignore it and it'll go away")
Consequences Influence
Behaviors Based Upon
Individual Perceptions of:
 Timing - immediate or future
 Consistency - certain or uncertain
• Significance
{Magnitude
Impact
positive
or
negative
Human Behavior
• Behaviors that have consequences that are:
• Soon
• Certain
• Positive
Have a stronger effect on people’s behavior
Some examples of Consequences:
Why is one sign often ignored, the
other one often followed?
Human Behavior
• Soon
• A consequence that follows soon after a
behavior has a stronger influence than
consequences that occur later
• Silence is considered to be consent
• Failure to correct unsafe behavior
influences employees to continue the
behavior
Human Behavior
• Certain
• A consequence that is certain to follow a
behavior has more influence than an
uncertain or unpredictable consequence
• Corrective Action must be:
– Prompt
– Consistent
– Persistent
Human Behavior
• Positive
• A positive consequence influences
behavior more powerfully than a
negative consequence
• Penalties and Punishment don’t work
• Speeding Ticket Analogy
Human Behavior
• Example: Smokers find it hard to stop
smoking because the consequences are:
A) Soon (immediate)
B) Certain (they happen every time)
C) Positive (a nicotine high)
The other consequences are:
A) Late (years later)
B) Uncertain (not all smokers get lung cancer)
C) Negative (lung cancer)
Deviations from SOP
• No Safe Procedure
• Employee Didn’t know Safe Procedure
• Employee knew, did not follow Safe
Procedure
• Procedure encouraged risk-taking
• Employee changed approved procedure
Human Behavior
• Thought Question:
What would you do as a worker if you
had to take 10-15 minutes to don the
correct P.P.E. to enter an area to turn off
a control valve which took 10 seconds?
Human Behavior
• Punishment or threatening workers is a
behavioral method used by some Safety
Management programs
• Punishment only works if:
– It is immediate
– Occurs every time there is an unsafe behavior
• This is very hard to do
Human Behavior
• The soon, certain, positive reinforcement
from unsafe behavior outweighs the
uncertain, late, negative reinforcement
from inconsistent punishment
• People tend to respond more positively to
praise and social approval than any other
factors
Human Behavior
• Some experts believe you can change worker’s
safety behavior by changing their “Attitude”
• Accident Report – “Safety Attitude”
• A person’s “Attitude” toward any subject is
linked with a set of other attitudes - Trying to
change them all would be nearly impossible
• A Behavior change leads to a new “Attitude”
because people reduce tension between
Behavior and their “Attitude”
Are inside a person’s head -therefore they
are not observable nor measurable
Attitudes can be changed by
changing behaviors
however
Attitudes
Human Behavior
• “Attention” Behavioral Safety approach
– Focuses on getting workers to pay
“Attention”
– Inability to control “Attention” is a
contributing factor in many injuries
• You can’t scare workers into a safety
focus with “Pay Attention” campaigns
Reasons for Lack of Attention
1. Technology encourages short attention
spans (TV remote, Computer Mouse)
2. Increased Job Stress caused by
uncertainty (mergers & downsizing)
3. Lean staffing and increased workloads
require quick attention shifts between
tasks
4. Fast pace of work – little time to learn
new tasks and do familiar ones safely
Reasons for Lack of Attention
5. Work repetition can lull workers into a loss of
attention
6. Low level of loyalty shown to employees by an
ever reorganizing employer may lead to:
a) Disinterested workers
b) Detached workers (no connection to employer)
c) Inattentive workers
Human Behavior
• Focusing on “Awareness” is a typical
educational approach to change safety
behavior
• Example: You provide employees with a
persuasive rationale for wearing safety
glasses and hearing protection in certain
work areas
Human Behavior
Developing Personal Safety Awareness
A) Before starting, consider how to do job safely
B) Understand required P.P.E. and how to use it
C) Determine correct tools and ensure they are in good
condition
D) Scan work area – know what is going on
E) As you work, check work position – reduce any strain
F) Any unsafe act or condition should be corrected
G) Remain aware of any changes in your workplace – people
coming, going, etc.
H) Talk to other workers about safety
I) Take safety home with you
Human Behavior
Some Thought Questions:
1. Do you want to work safely?
2. Do you want others to work safely?
3. Do you want to learn how to prevent
accidents/injuries?
4. How often do you think about safety as you
work?
5. How often do you look for actions that
could cause or prevent injuries?
Human Behavior
• More Thought Questions:
a) Have you ever carried wood without wearing gloves?
b) Have you ever left something in a walkway that was a
tripping hazard?
c) Have you ever carried a stack of boxes that blocked your
view?
d) Have you ever used a tool /equipment you didn’t know how
to operate?
e) Have you ever left a desk or file drawer open while you
worked in an area?
f) Have you ever placed something on a stair “Just for a
minute”?
g) Have you ever done anything unsafe because “I’ve always
done it this way”?
Human Behavior
TIME!
“All this safety stuff takes time doesn’t it”?
“I’m too busy”!
“I can’t possibly do all this”!
“The boss wants the job done now”!
Human Behavior
• Does rushing through the job, working quickly
without considering safety, really save time?
• Remember – if an incident occurs, the job may
not get done on time and someone could be
injured – and that someone could be YOU!!
Safety Intervention Strategies
Approach # of Studies # of Subjects Reduction %
Behavior Based 7 2,444 59.6%
Ergonomics 3 n/a 51.6%
Engineering Change 4 n/a 29.0%
Problem Solving 1 76
20.0%
Gov’t. Action 2 2 18.3%
Mgt. Audits 4 n/a 17.0%
Stress Management 2 1,300 15.0%
Poster Campaign 26 100 14.0%
Personnel Selection 26 19,177 3.7%
Near-miss Reports 2 n/a 0%
OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS
NEGATIVE OUTCOMES
POSITIVE OUTCOMES
$ Direct Costs
• Medical
• Insurance
• Lost Time
• Fines
Compliance
• Failure to develop and implement a
program may be cited as a SERIOUS
violation (by itself or "Grouped" with
other violations)
Penalties (as high as $ 2,000) may be
assessed
Compliance
• Up to 35% of the penalty can be
deducted based upon an employer's
"good faith“ - Good faith is based
upon:
– Awareness of the Law
– Efforts to comply with the Law before the
inspection
– Correction of hazards during the inspection
– Cooperation & Attitude during the inspection
– Overall safety and health efforts including the
Accident Prevention Program
Indirect Costs
• Injured, Lost Time
Wages
• Non-Injured, Lost
Time Wages
• Overtime
• Supervisor Wages
• Lost Bonuses
• Employee Morale
• Need For
Counseling
• Turn-over
Indirect Costs
• Equipment Rental
• Cancelled Contracts
• Lost Orders
• Equipment/Material
Damage
• Investigation Team Time
• Decreased Production
• Light Duty
• New Hire Learning Time
• Administrative Time
• Community Goodwill
• Public/Customer
Perception
• 3rd Party Lawsuits
“REAL” Costs
OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS
• POSITIVE ASPECTS
– Accident investigation
– Prevent repeat of accident
– Improved safety programs
– Improved procedures
– Improved equipment design
Accident Prevention Program
• Must Be
– Written
– Tailored to particular hazards for a particular
plant or operation
• Minimum Elements
– Safety Orientation Program
– Safety and Health Committee
Accident Prevention Program
• Safety Orientation
– Description of Total Safety Program
– Safe Practices for Initial Job Assignment
– How and When to Report Injuries
– Location of First Aid Facilities in Workplace
– How to Report Unsafe Conditions & Practices
– Use and Care of PPE
– Emergency Actions
– Identification of hazardous materials
Accident Prevention Program
• Designated Safety and Health Committee
– Management Representatives
– Employee Elected Representatives
• Max. 1 year
• Must be equal # or more employee representatives than
employer representatives
– Elected Chairperson
– Self-determine frequency of meetings
• 1 hour or less unless majority votes
– Minutes
• Keep for 1 Year
• Available for review by OSHA Personnel
Accident Prevention Program
• Safety Meeting instead of Safety
Committee
– If less than 11 employees
• Total
• Per shift
• Per location
– Meet at least once/month
– 1 Management Representative
Safety Meeting
You Must
– Review inspection reports
– Evaluate accident investigations
– Evaluate APP and discuss recommendations
– Document attendance and topics
Safety Committees
Safety Committees
They should meet as often as necessary
This will depend on volume of production and
conditions such as
• Number of employees
• Size of workplace covered
• Nature of work undertaken on site
• Type of hazards and degree of risk
Meetings should not be cancelled
Proactive
Safety
Safety Committees
The Goal of the committee is to facilitate a safe
workplace
Objectives that guide a committee towards the goal include:
Motivate, educate and train at all levels to ID, Reduce, &
Avoid Hazards
Incorporate safety into every aspect of the organization
Create a culture where each person is responsible for
safety of self and others
Encourage and utilize ideas from all sources
Four points to Remember:
•Communication:Must be a loop system
•Dedication: From everyone
•Partnership: Between Management
and Employees
•Participation: An important part of
team working.
How effective
can a
Committee be?
Safety Committee
Policy Statement
A written and publicized statement is an
effective means of providing guidance and
demonstrating commitment
Safety Committee Focus
• Long Term Goals
– Objectives to Achieve
– Time Frame
• Short Term Goals
– Assignments between Meetings
– Work toward achieving Long-Term Plan
Planning the Safety Meeting
• Select topics
• Set & post the agenda
• Schedule safety meeting
• Prepare meeting site
• Encourage participation
Conducting A Safety Meeting
Provide an attendance list or sign in sheet
Provide a meeting agenda
Call meeting to order and review meeting topics
Cover any old business
Primary meeting topic
Future agendas
Close meeting and document
Components of an Agenda
Opening statement including reason for
attendance, objective, and time
commitment
Items to be discussed
Generate alternative solutions
Decide among the alternatives
Develop a plan to solve the problem
Assign task to carry out plan
Establish follow-up procedures
Summarize and adjourn
Regular Agenda Item
• Review Policies & Plans such as:
– Hazard Communication Program
– Personal Protective Equipment
– Respiratory Protection
– Housekeeping
– Machine Safeguarding
– Safety Audits
– Record Keeping
– Emergency Response Plans
Emergency Plan
• Anticipate What
Could Go Wrong
and Plan for
those Situations
• Drill for
Emergency
Situations
Emergency Action Plan
• The following minimum elements shall be included :
– Alarm Systems
– Emergency escape procedures and route assignments;
– Procedures for employees who remain to operate critical
plant operations before evacuation
– Procedures to account for all employees
– Rescue and medical duties for those employees who are to
perform them
– The preferred means of reporting fires and other
emergencies
– Names / job titles of who can be contacted for further
information or explanation of duties under the plan
Record Keeping & Updating
• Record each Recordable Injury & Illness on
OSHA 300 Log w/in 6 Days
– Recordable
• Occupational fatalities
• Lost workday
• Result in light-duty or termination or require medical
treatment (other than first aid) or involve loss of
consciousness or restriction of work or motion
• This information in posted every year from
February 1 to April 30 in the OSHA 300A
Summary
Record Keeping and Updating
• First Aid - one-time treatment that could be
expected to be given by a person trained in
basic first-aid using supplies from a first-aid kit
and any follow-up visit or visits for the purpose
of observation of the extent of treatment
• NOTE: The new OSHA Recordkeeping Rule
lists the specific First Aid Treatments
Immediately Report:
– Any accident that involves: 1. Injury 2. Illness 3.
Equipment or property damage
– Any near-misses. A near miss is an event that,
strictly by chance, does not result in actual or observable
injury, illness, death, or property damage. Examples:
slips, trips & falls, compressed gas cylinder falling,
overexposures to a chemical
– Any hazards such as: Exposed electrical wires,
Damaged PPE, Improper material storage, Improper
chemical use, Horseplay, Damaged equipment, Missing
or loose machine guards
HAZARD ANALYSIS
Hazard Analysis
• Orderly process used to determine if a
hazard exists in the workplace
– Uncover hazards overlooked in design
– Locate hazards developed in-process
– Determine essential steps of a job
– Identify hazards that result from the
performance of the actual job
Step 1: Identify Hazards
HAZARD –
condition with
the potential to
cause personal
injury, death and
property damage
Hazard Identification
• Review Records
• Talk to Personnel
• Accident Investigations
• Follow Process Flow
• Write a Job Safety Analysis
• Use Inspection Checklists
STEP 2: Assess Hazards
• Probability - How likely is the hazard?
– Likely
– Not likely
• Severity - What will happen if
encountered?
– Death
– Serious Injury
– Damage to property
Levels of Risk Awareness
• Unaware: Doesn’t realize at-risk
• Post-Awareness: Realizes Risk After Task
Completion
• Engaged-Awareness: Recognizes Risk While
Performing Task(s) and corrects the situation
• Proactive-Awareness: Foresee Hazards and
Begins Task Only When Safe to Proceed
Who is at Risk?
• Workers
• Visitors
– Invited
• Customers
• Emergency services
• Delivery drivers
– Uninvited
• Trespassers
• Burglars
♦ Contractors
♦ Janitorial
♦ Maintenance
♦ Others
♦ Members of Public
♦ Passers-by
♦ Neighbors
STEP 3: Make Risk Decisions
What can we do to reduce the risk?
Does the benefit outweigh the risk?
STEP 4: Implement Controls
• Substitution
• Engineering controls
• Administrative Controls
• Personal Protective Equipment
Hazard Controls
Source
Path
Receiver
Hazard Control
Administrative Engineering
Protective Equipment/Clothing
Engineering
Hazard Elimination
Add-On Safety Design
“Active” vs. “Passive”
User Instructions
(Manual)
Ventilation
Design/Layout
Safety Devices
Administrative
• Safety Rules
• Disciplinary Policy - Accountability
• Preventative Maintenance
• Training
• Proficiency/Knowledge Demonstrations
Step 5: Supervise
• Ensure risk control
measures are
implemented
• Track progress
• Feedback
JOB SAFETY
ANALYSIS
Job Safety Analysis
• Break down a task into its component steps
• Determine hazards connected with each key
step
• Identify methods to prevent or protect
against the hazard
Job Safety Analysis
Job Safety Analysis Priorities
• New JobsNew Jobs
• Potential of Severe InjuriesPotential of Severe Injuries
• History of Disabling InjuriesHistory of Disabling Injuries
• Frequency of AccidentsFrequency of Accidents
Observation of the Actual Work
• Select experienced worker(s) to
participate in the JSA process
• Explain purpose of JSA
• Observe the employee perform the job
and write down basic steps
• Completely describe each step
• Note any deviations (Very Important!)
Identify Hazards &
Potential Accidents
• Search for Hazards
– Produced by Work
– Produced by Environment
• Repeat job observation as many times as
necessary to identify all hazards
Key Steps TOO MUCH
Changing a Flat Tire
• Pull off road
• Put car in “park”
• Set brake
• Activate emergency flashers
• Open door
• Get out of car
• Walk to trunk
• Put key in lock
• Open trunk
• Remove jack
• Remove Spare tire
Key Steps NOT ENOUGH
Changing a Flat Tire
• Park car
• Take off flat
tire
• Put on spare
tire
• Drive away
Key Job Steps JUST RIGHT
Changing a Flat Tire
• Park & set brake
• Remove jack & tire
from trunk
• Loosen lug nuts
• Jack up car
• Remove tire
• Set new tire
• Jack down car
• Tighten lug nuts
• Store tire & jack
Job Safety Analysis
• Steps
– Park & set
brake
– Remove
Spare &
Jack
– Loosen lugs
Job Safety Analysis
• Hazards
– Hit by
traffic
– Back
Strain
– Foot/Toe
impact
– Shoulder
strain
• Steps
– Park & set
brake
– Remove Spare
& Jack
– Loosen lugs
Job Safety Analysis
• Hazards
– Hit by
traffic
– Back Strain
– Foot/Toe
impact
– Shoulder
strain
• Steps
– Park & set
brake
– Remove Spare
& Jack
– Loosen lugs
• Prevention
– Far off road as
possible
– Pull items close
before lift
– Lift in increments
– Lift and lower
using leg power
– Wide leg stance
– Use full body, not
arm/shoulder
Develop Solutions
• Find a new way
to do job
• Change physical
conditions that
create hazards
• Change the
work procedure
• Reduce
frequency
• Fix-A-Flat
• No off-road
driving
• Buy self-sealing
tires
• Maintenance /
Change-out
program
JSA EXERCISE
INSPECTIONS
Inspections
• Fact-Finding vs. Fault Finding
– Sound knowledge of the plant
– Knowledge of relevant standards & codes
– Systematic inspection steps
– Method of evaluating data
Inspection Limitations
• “Blinder affect”
• Rote inspections
• All Check - No action
• Who is inspecting?
Outcomes
• Improve Safety
– New Way to Do Job
– Change Physical Conditions
– Change Work Procedures
– Reduce Frequency of Dangerous Job
New Way To Do The Job
• Determine the work goal of the job, and
then analyze the various ways of
reaching this goal to see which way is
safest
• Consider work saving tools and
equipment
Change in Physical Conditions
• Tools, materials, equipment layout or
location
• Study change carefully for other benefits
(costs, time savings)
Change in Work Procedures
• What should the worker do to eliminate
the hazard?
• How should it be done?
• Document changes in detail
Reduce Frequency of
Dangerous Job
• What can be done to reduce the
frequency of the job??
• Identify parts that cause frequent repairs
- change
• Reduce vibration save machine parts
Performing Safety Audits
Guide for Personal Audits
The guide has five steps
• Audit
• React
• Communicate
• Follow up
• Raise standards
Audit
• Get into one of the work areas on a
regular basis
• Develop your own system
• Do not combine a safety audit with other
visits
• Audit must be designed to evaluate safety
• Take notes
React
• How you react is the strongest element in
improving the safety culture
• Your reaction tells what is acceptable and not
acceptable
• You must come away from each inspection with a
reaction:
1. Acceptable because...
2. Not acceptable because...
3. Deteriorated because...
4. Improved because…
Communicate
• In order for the contact to be productive, your
subordinate/co-worker must understand that:
You inspected his or her area
You are pleased (or displeased) with what you saw
because of…
You expect him or her to react to your comments and to
improve
You will audit the area again in a specified number of
days
Follow Up
• Critical for success of the safety program
• Allows you to demonstrate that it is
important
• Must communicate your assessment to the
employees
Raise Standards
• Will see improvement if the first four
steps are followed
• Keep raising your expectations and help
provide leadership
• Solve the obvious problems then fine
tune the safety and housekeeping efforts
Key Points: Becoming a Good Observer
• Effective observation includes:
Be selective
Know what to look for
Practice
Keep an open mind
Guard against habit and familiarity
Do not be satisfied with general impressions
Record observations systematically
Observation Techniques
To become a good observer, a person
must:
• Stop for 10 to 30 seconds before entering an
area to ascertain where employees are
working
• Be alert for unsafe practices
• Observe activity -- do not avoid the action
Observation Techniques
• Remember ABBI -- look Above, Below,
Behind, Inside
• Develop a questioning attitude
• Use all senses
• sight
• hearing
• smell
• touch
Inspections and Field
Observations
• Use a checklist
• Ask questions
• Take notes
• Respect lines of communication
• Draw conclusions
Unsafe Acts
• Conduct that unnecessarily increases the
likelihood of injury
• All safety rule and procedure violations
are unsafe acts
• All unsafe acts should be corrected
immediately
Unsafe Conditions
• An unsafe condition is a situation, not
directly caused by the action or inaction
of one or more employees, in an area that
may lead to an incident or injury if
uncorrected
• Unsafe conditions are normally beyond
the direct control of employees in the
area where the condition is observed
Audit Practices
• Concentrate on people and their actions
because actions of people account for more
than 96 percent of all injuries
 When to audit
 Where to audit
 How much to audit
 Auditing contractors
Management Commitment
Should Management Consider Safety as a Priority
in Conducting Business
??
Management Commitment
NO !
PRIORITIES CHANGE
SAFETY
MUST BE A
VALUE!!
Employee Participation
• Accident Prevention
Plan Development
• Safety Committee
• Safety Bulletin
Board
• Crew-Leader
• Day-to-Day Knowledge
comes from where the
work is actually done
and hazards actually
exist.
SHARED VISION
EXERCISE
AVAILABLE RESOURCES
• OSHA Website: www.osha.gov
• Washington State Labor & Industries
Website: www.lni.wa.gov
ACCIDENT
INVESTIGATION
INTRODUCTION
• Thousands of accidents occur throughout the
United States every day
• Accident investigations determine how and why
these failures occur
• Conduct accident investigations with accident
prevention in mind - Investigations are NOT to
place blame
• Investigate all accidents regardless of the extent
of injury or damage
THE ACCIDENT
WHAT IS AN ACCIDENT?
THE ACCIDENT
An
unplanned and unwelcome event
that interrupts normal activity
Accidents are What Happens to
Somebody Else
BUT REMEMBER:
YOU
are somebody else
to somebody else
THE ACCIDENT
MINOR ACCIDENTS:
• Such as paper cuts to fingers or dropping
a box of materials
THE ACCIDENT
MORE SERIOUS ACCIDENTS
• Such as a forklift dropping a load or
someone falling off a ladder
THE ACCIDENT
• Accidents that occur over an extended
time frame:
– Such as hearing loss or an illness resulting
from exposure to chemicals
THE ACCIDENT
NEAR-MISS
• Also know as a “Near Hit”
• An accident that does not quite result in
injury or damage (but could have)
• Remember, a near-miss is just as serious
as an accident!
THE ACCIDENT
ACCIDENTS HAVE TWO THINGS IN
COMMON
THE ACCIDENT
They all have outcomes from the accident
THE ACCIDENT
They all have contributory factors that
cause the accident
OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS
• NEGATIVE Results
– Injury & possible death
– Disease
– Damage to equipment & property
– Litigation costs, possible citations
– Lost productivity
– Morale
OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS
• POSITIVE Results
– Accident investigation
– Prevent repeat of accident
– Change to safety programs
– Change to procedures
– Change to equipment design
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION
• Accidents are usually complex
• An accident may have 10 or more events
that can be causes
• A detailed analysis of an accident will
normally reveal three cause levels:
– direct
– indirect
– root
Direct Cause
• An accident results only when a person
or object receives an amount of energy
or hazardous material that cannot be
absorbed safely - This energy or
hazardous material is the DIRECT
CAUSE of the accident
The direct cause is usually the result of one or
more unsafe acts or unsafe conditions or both
Indirect and Root Causes
• Unsafe acts and conditions are the indirect
causes or symptoms of accidents
• Indirect causes are usually traceable to:
– poor management policies and decisions
– personal or environmental factors
• Root causes are the actual policies and
decisions by management and the actual
personal and environmental factors of the
workplace
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION
• Conduct a preliminary
investigation for:
– serious injuries with immediate
symptoms
• Document the investigation
findings
You Must:
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION
• Do Not move equipment involved in a work
or work related accident or incident if :
– A death
– A probable death
– 3 or more employees are sent to the hospital
(WISHA -2)
• Unless, Moving the equipment is necessary
to:
– Remove any victims
– Prevent further incidents and injuries
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION
• Within 8 hours of a work-related incident
or accident you must contact the nearest
office of the OSHA in person or by phone to
report
– A death
– A probable death
– 3 or more employees are sent to the hospital
(WISHA -2)
• (OSHA) 1-800-321-6742
• WISHA 1-800-4BE-SAFE (423-7233)
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION
• Assign witnesses and other employees
to assist OSHA personnel who arrive to
investigate the incident
Include:
– The immediate supervisor
– Employees who were witnesses to the
incident
– Other employees the investigator feels are
necessary to complete the investigation
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION
•Make sure your preliminary
investigation is conducted by the
following people:
– A person designated by the employer
– The immediate supervisor
– Witnesses
– An employee representative
– Other persons with experience and skills to
evaluate the facts
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION
A preliminary investigation includes
noting information such as the
following:
–Where did the accident or incident
occur?
–What time did it occur?
–What people were present?
–What was the employee doing at the
time?
–What happened during the accident or
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION
Provide the following information to OSHA
within 30 days concerning any accident
involving a fatality or hospitalization of 3 or
more employees:
– Name of the work place
– Location of the incident
– Time and date of the incident
– Number of fatalities or hospitalized employees
– Contact person
– Phone number
– Brief description of the incident
Why Not Rely On OSHA &
Police To Investigate?
• Focus On Culpability
• Minor Accidents Not
Investigated
• PREVENTION
• Protect Company
Interests
• OSHA Requirements
Investigating Accidents
How to find out what really happened
Why Investigate Accidents?
• Find the cause
• Prevent similar accidents
• Protect company interests
Acts Conditions
Near Misses
Minor Injuries
Reportable Injury
Lost Time
Injury
Death
Knowledge
Ability
Motivation
Design
Maintenance
Action
of
Others
At which level do we investigate?
Investigation Strategy
• Need For InvestigationNeed For Investigation
• Control the SceneControl the Scene
• Gather FactsGather Facts
• Analyze DataAnalyze Data
• Establish CausesEstablish Causes
• Write ReportWrite Report
• Take Corrective ActionTake Corrective Action
Investigative Procedures
• The actual procedures used in a particular
investigation depend on the nature and results
of the accident
• All investigations start with a collection of data
and are followed by analysis of that data
• An investigation is not complete until all data
is analyzed and a final report is completed
The Aim of the Investigation
• The key result should be to
prevent a repeat of the same
accident
• Fact finding:
– What happened?
– What was the root cause?
– What should be done to prevent
repeat of the accident?
The Aim of the Investigation
IS NOT TO:
• Exonerate individuals or management
• Satisfy insurance requirements
• Defend a position for legal argument
• Or, to assign blame
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COMPANY ACCIDENT
FORMS
• Must be filled out completely by
the employee and employee’s
immediate supervisor (this includes
foremen)
• Must be turned in to Safety within
24 hours of incident
BENEFITS OF ACCIDENT
INVESTIGATION
• Prevent repeat of the accident
• Identifying outmoded procedures
• Improvements to the work environment
• Increased productivity
• Improvement of operational & safety
procedures
• Raise safety awareness level
BENEFITS OF ACCIDENT
INVESTIGATION
• WHEN AN ORGANIZATION REACTS
SWIFTLY AND POSITIVELY TO
ACCIDENTS AND INJURIES, ITS
ACTIONS REAFFIRM ITS
COMMITMENT TO THE SAFETY
AND WELL-BEING OF ITS
EMPLOYEES!
Who Should Investigate?
Investigation TEAM
• Employer Designee (Management)
• Immediate Supervisor of affected area/personnel
• Experts (if needed)
• Employee Representative (one of the following:)
– Employee selected representative
– Employee representative of safety committee
– Union representative or shop steward
**Immediate Actions
• Assess the scene
• CALL 911
• Activate In-House Response
• Scene Safety
• Provide Aid to Injured
• Provide Assistance to Affected
• Secure the Scene of Accident
Isolate the Scene
• Barricade the area of the accident, and
keep everyone out!
• The only persons allowed inside the
barricade should be Rescue/EMS, law
enforcement, and investigators
• Protect the evidence until investigation is
complete
Provide Care to the Injured
• Ensure that medical care is provided to
the injured people before proceeding
with the investigation
Secure the Scene for Safety
• Eliminate the hazards:
– Control chemicals
– De-energize
– De-pressurize
– Light it up
– Shore it up
– Ventilate
Fact Finding
• Gather evidence from
many sources during an
investigation
• Get information from
witnesses and reports as
well as by observation
• Don’t try to analyze data
as evidence is gathered
Gather Evidence
• Examine the accident scene - Look for things
that will help you understand what happened:
– Dents, cracks, scrapes, splits, etc. in equipment
– Tire tracks, footprints, etc.
– Spills or leaks
– Scattered or broken parts
– Any other possible evidence
Gather Evidence
• Diagram the scene:
– Use blank paper or graph
paper. Mark the location of
all pertinent items;
equipment, parts, spills,
persons, etc.
– Note distances and sizes,
pressures and
temperatures
– Note direction (mark north
on the map)
Gather Evidence
• Take photographs
– Photograph any items or scenes which may provide an
understanding of what happened to anyone who was
not there
– Photograph any items which will not remain, or which
will be cleaned up (spills, tire tracks, footprints, etc.)
– 35mm cameras, Polaroids, and video cameras are all
acceptable
• Digital cameras are not recommended -
digital images can be easily altered
Photographs
• Unbiased Recording
• Keep Log of Photos
• Overall to Close-up
• Color if possible
• Supplement with Video
Gather Data
• Data includes:
– Persons involved
– Date, time, location
– Activities at time of accident
– Equipment involved
– List of witnesses
Review Records
• Check training records
– Was appropriate training provided?
– When was training provided?
• Check equipment maintenance records
– Is regular PM or service provided?
– Is there a recurring type of failure?
• Check accident records
– Have there been similar incidents or injuries
involving other employees?
Documents
• Collect All Related Documents
– Inspection Logs
– Policy & Procedures Manual
– JSA (Job Safety Analysis)
– Equipment Operations Manuals
– Insurance Records
– Employee Records
– Police Reports
Those who do not know the
past are destined to:
Repeat
Repeat
Repeat
Repeat
Repeat
Repeat
It.
ISOLATE FACT FROM
FICTION
• Use NORMS-based analysis of
information
– Not an interpretation
– Observable
– Reliable
– Measurable
– Specific
• If an item meets all five of above, it
is a fact
NORMS OF OBJECTIVITY
Objective
Not an Interpretation - Based on
a factual description.
Observable - Based on what is seen
or heard.
Reliable - Two or more people
independently agree on what they
observed.
Measurable - A number is used to
describe behavior or situation.
Specific - Based on detailed
definitions of what happened.
Subjective
Interpretations - Based on
personal
interpretations/biases.
Non-observable - Based on
events not directly observed.
Unreliable - Two or more
people don’t agree on what
they observed.
Non-Measurable - A
number isn’t used.
General - Based on non-
detailed descriptions.
INVESTIGATION TRAPS
• Put your emotions aside!
– Don’t let your feelings interfere -
stick to the facts!
• Do not pre-judge
– Find out the what really happened
– Do not let your beliefs cloud the
facts
• Never assume anything
• Do not make any judgements
Record Evidence
• Keep All Notes in Bound Notebook
• Include Date - Time - Place – Vantage Point
• Keep Originals
• Rewrite in Report Form
Samples
• Collect Perishables
First
• Fluids
• Open Containers
• Filings
• Chemicals
• Air
Interviews
• Experienced personnel should conduct
interviews
• If possible the team assigned to this task
should include an individual with a legal
background
• After interviewing all witnesses, the team
should analyze each witness' statement
Interviews
• Analyze this information along with data
from the accident site
• Not all people react in the same manner
to a particular stimulus
• A witness who has had a traumatic
experience may not be able to recall the
details of the accident
• A witness who has a vested interest in the
results of the investigation may offer
biased testimony
Interviews
• Excellent Source of first hand knowledge
• May Present Pitfalls in form of:
– Bias
– Perspective
– Embellishment
– Omissions
Ask “What Happened”
• Get a brief overview of
the situation from
witnesses and victims
• Not a detailed report
yet, just enough to
understand the basics
of what happened
Interview Victims & Witnesses
• Interview as soon as possible
after the incident
– Do not interrupt medical care
to interview
• Interview each person
separately
• Do not allow witnesses to
confer prior to interview
The Interview
• Put the person at ease
– People may be reluctant to
discuss the incident, particularly
if they think someone will get in
trouble
• Reassure them that this is a
fact-finding process only
– Remind them that these facts
will be used to prevent a
recurrence of the incident
The Interview
• Take Notes!
• Ask open-ended questions
– “What did you see?”
– “What happened?”
• Do not make suggestions
– If the person is stumbling over a word or
concept, do not help them out
The Interview
• Use closed-ended questions later to gain
more detail
– After the person has provided their
explanation, these type of questions can be
used to clarify
– “Where were you standing?”
– “What time did it happen?”
The Interview
• Don’t ask leading questions
– Bad: “Why was the forklift operator driving
recklessly?”
– Good: “How was the forklift operator driving?”
• If the witness begins to offer reasons, excuses,
or explanations, politely decline that knowledge
and remind them to stick with the facts
The Interview
• Summarize what you have been told
– Correct misunderstandings of the events
between you and the witness
• Ask the witness/victim for
recommendations to prevent recurrence
– These people will often have the best
solutions to the problem
The Interview
• Get a written, signed statement from the
witness
– It is best if the witness writes their own
statement; interview notes signed by the
witness may be used if the witness refuses to
write a statement
Ask All Witnesses
• Name, address, phone number
• What did you see?
• What did you hear?
• Where were you standing/sitting?
• What do you think caused the accident?
• Was there anything different today?
Ask Supervisors
• What is normal procedure for activities
involved in the accident?
• What type of training persons involved in
accident have had?
• What, if anything was different today?
• What they think caused the accident?
• What could have prevented the accident?
Witness Interviews
DO
• Separate Witnesses
• Written Statements
• Open ended questions
• Provide Diagrams
• Encourage Details
• Show Concern
• Record w/permission
DON’T
• Suggest Answers
• Interrogate
• Focus on Blame
• Dismiss Details
• Bar Emotions
• Make Judgments
Analysis of Accident Causes
• Immediate Causes
• What was done?
• What was not done?
• What hazardous condition existed?
• Root Causes
• Why did they do this?
• Why didn’t they do that?
• Why did the unsafe condition exist?
• Why wasn’t it corrected?
Analyze Data
• Gather all photos, drawings, interview
material and other information collected
at the scene
• Determine a clear picture of what
happened
• Formally document sequence of events
CONTRIBUTING FACTORS
INVESTIGATION STRATEGY
• INVESTIGATION TEAM
• EVALUATES ALL FACTORS CONCERNED
• ISOLATES THE KEY FACTOR(S) BY
ASKING THE FOLLOWING QUESTION....
• WOULD THE ACCIDENT HAVE HAPPENED
IF THIS PARTICULAR FACTOR WAS NOT
PRESENT?
DETERMINE CAUSES
• Employee actions
• Safe behavior, at-risk behavior
• Environmental conditions
• Lighting, heat/cold, moisture/humidity, dust,
vapors, etc.
• Equipment condition
• Defective/operational, guards, leaks, broken parts,
etc.
• Procedures
• Existing (or not), followed (or not), appropriate (or
not)
• Training
• Was employee trained - when, by whom,
documentation
Indirect Causes
• Unsafe conditions – what material
conditions, environmental conditions and
equipment conditions contributed to the
accident
• Unsafe Acts – what activities contributed
to the accident
Breakdown of Unsafe Conditions
• Inadequately guarded or
unguarded equipment
• Defective tools, equipment or
materials
• Fire and explosion hazard
• Unexpected movement hazard
• Projection hazards
Breakdown of Unsafe Conditions
• Housekeeping
• Hazardous environmental conditions
• Improper ventilation
• Improper illumination
• Unsafe dress or apparel
Breakdown of Unsafe Acts
• Operating without authority
• Operating or working at unsafe speeds
• Making safety devices inoperative
• Using unsafe equipment
• Neglecting to wear PPE
• Unsafe loading, placing, mixing, combining
• Taking unsafe position or posture
Basic Causes
• Management
• Environment
• Equipment
• Human Behavior
Systems & Procedures
Design & Equipment
Management
• Was a hazard assessment conducted?
• Were the hazards recognized?
• Was control of the hazards addressed?
• Were employees trained?
• Did supervision detect/correct deviations?
• Was Supervisor trained in job/accident
prevention?
• What were the production rates?
FIND ROOT CAUSES
• When you have determined
the contributing factors, dig
deeper!
– If employee error, what
caused that behavior?
– If defective machine, why
wasn’t it fixed?
– If poor lighting, why not
corrected?
– If no training, why not?
Contribution of Safety
Controls such as:
• Engineering Controls - machine guards, safety
controls, isolation of hazardous areas,
monitoring devices, etc.
• Administrative Controls - procedures,
assessments, inspection, records to monitor and
ensure safe practices and environments are
maintained.
• Training Controls - initial new hire safety
orientation, job specific safety training and
periodic refresher training.
What controls failed?
• List the specific engineering,
administrative and training controls that
failed and how these failures contributed
to the accident
What controls worked?
• List any controls that prevented a
more serious accident or
minimized collateral damage or
injuries
Determine
• What was not normal before the
accident
• Where the abnormality occurred
• When it was first noted
• How it occurred
Report Causes
• Analysis of the Accident – HOW &
WHY
a. Direct causes (energy sources;
hazardous materials)
b. Indirect causes (unsafe acts and
conditions)
c. Basic causes (management policies;
personal or environmental factors)
Unable to Identify Root Causes
• Timeliness
• Poor development of information
• Reluctance to accept responsibility
• Narrow interpretations of
environmental causes
• Erroneous emphasis on a single cause
• Allowing solutions to determine causes
• Wrong person(s) investigating
PREPARE A REPORT
• Accident Reports should contain
the following:
– Description of incident and injuries
– Sequence of events
– Pertinent facts discovered during
investigation
– Conclusions of the investigator(s)
– Recommendations for correcting
problems
PREPARE A REPORT, (CONT.)
• Be objective!
– State facts
– Assign cause(s), not blame
– If referring to an individual’s actions, don’t
use names in the recommendation
• Good: All employees should…….
• Bad: George should……..
Recommendations
• Action to remedy
– Basic causes
– Indirect causes
– Direct causes
• Recommendations - as a result of the finding is
there a need to make changes to:
– Employee training?
– Work Stations Design?
– Policies or procedures?
Recommendations
• Consider
-Effectiveness -Cost
-Feasibility -Effect on Productivity
-Time to Implement -Employee Acceptance
-Management Acceptance
Accepting Inadequate Reports
• There is no surer way to destroy a
program's effectiveness than to accept
substandard work
• This immediately sends a signal to
subordinates that accident investigation
is not a high priority and does not receive
significant attention from management
Common Problems
• Accidents not reported
• Unable to identify basic causes
• Accepting inadequate reports
• Neglecting to implement corrective
actions
Accidents Not Reported
• Nothing is learned from unreported
accidents
• Accident causes are left uncorrected
• Infections and injury aggravations result
• Neglecting to report tends to spread and
become a common practice
Why Workers Fail to Report
• Fear of discipline
• Concern for reputation
• Fear of medical treatment
• Desire to keep personal record clean
• Avoidance of red tape
• Concern about attitudes of others
• Poor understanding of importance
Combat Reporting Problems
• Indoctrinate new employees
• Encourage workers to report minor accidents
• Focus on accident prevention and loss control
• Be positive
• Discuss past accidents
• Take corrective action promptly
Neglecting to Implement
Corrective Action
• The whole purpose of the investigation
process is negated if management fails to
remedy the causes
• Here again, management sends a signal
to subordinates that it's not important,
and subordinates develop the attitude
that it's an exercise in futility and "why
bother?
Improving the Quality of
Accident Investigation
• Insist on reporting of all injuries
• Adopt a well-designed accident report form
• Train all levels of management
• Insist on the investigation of all accidents
• Participate actively in serious accident
investigations
Improving the Quality of
Accident Investigation
• Review and comment
• Refuse to accept inadequate reports
• Establish controls to follow up on corrective
actions
• Be responsive to recommendations
• Hold responsible persons accountable
• Emphasize that accident investigations are
FACT-finding, not FAULT-finding
• Encourage investigators to challenge the system
Summary
• Most accident investigations follow
formal procedures
• An investigation is not concluded until
completion of a final report
• A successful accident investigation
determines what happened and how and
why the accident occurred
• Investigations are an effort to prevent a
similar or perhaps more disastrous
sequence of events
Other Accident Investigation Tools
Problem Solving
Fault Tree
• Deductive, top-down method of analyzing
• Identify all elements that could cause
Accident
• Performed graphically using AND and OR
gates
• Create symbolic representation of events
resulting in the Accident
• Entire system and human interactions are
analyzed
Problem Solving
Fault Tree
W e t F lo o r
E n v iro n m e n ta l
S u d d e n R e le a s e
N o P re s h ift In s p e c tio n
S lo w L e a k
B re a k L in e L e a k
N o F lu id
B ra k e s F a il S te e rin g F a ils
E q u ip m e n t
N o T ra in in g
P ro c e d u ra l
N o T ra in in g
D id N o t K n o w In te n tio n a l O m is s io n
N o In s p e c tio n
H u m a n
F a ilu re T o S to p
P IT H its W a ll
Problem Solving
Fault Tree
S u d d e n R e le a s e
N o P re sh ift In sp e c tio n
S lo w L e a k
B re a k L in e L e a k
N o F lu id
B ra k e s F a il
E q u ip m e n t
N O T R A IN IN G
S u p v . s ic k
S u p .R e s p .
T ra in in g R e q 'd
P ro c e d u ra l
T ra in in g N o t R e c e ive d
D id N o t K n o w
T im e ltd .
In te n tio n a l O m is s io n
D id n o t C o n d u c t In s p e c tio n
H u m a n
F a ilu re T o S to p
P IT H its W a ll
ISHIKAWA “FISHBONE”
DIAGRAM
Machinery Methods
Materials People Environment
EFFECT
FIVE WHYs DIAGRAM
Undesired Event
Why?
Direct Cause
Why?
Contributing Cause
Why?
Contributing Cause
Why?
Contributing Cause
Why?
Root Cause
ACCIDENT
ANALYSIS AND
REPORT
(Handout)
TEST

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Acc injury-prev2

  • 1. Photo: “Tulalip Bay” by Diane L. Wilson-Simon
  • 2. ACCIDENT & INJURY PREVENTION Instructor: Kerrie Murphy Edmonds Community College This course is being supported under grant number SH16637SH7 from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor. It does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Department of Labor, nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. With Thanks to & Cooperation of the Tulalip Occupational Safety & Health Administration (TOSHA)
  • 4. PROaction versus REaction • “Well that’s an accident waiting to happen…” • “Someone ought to do something…” That someone is YOU!
  • 5.
  • 7. What Is An Accident?
  • 8. What Is An Accident?
  • 9. An Accident is: • a. An unexpected and undesirable event, especially one resulting in damage or harm: car accidents on icy roads. • b. An unforeseen incident: A series of happy accidents led to his promotion. • c. An instance of involuntary urination or defecation in one's clothing. • 2. Lack of intention; chance: ran into an old friend by accident. • 3. Logic A circumstance or attribute that is not essential to the nature of something. http://www.thefreedictionary.com/accident
  • 10. Hazard • Existing or Potential Condition That Alone or Interacting With Other Factors Can Cause Harm • A Spill on the Floor • Broken Equipment
  • 11. Risk • A measure of the probability and severity of a hazard to harm human health, property, or the environment • A measure of how likely harm is to occur and an indication of how serious the harm might be RiskRisk ≠≠ 00
  • 12. Safety FREEDOM FROM DANGER OR HARM Nothing is Free of BUT - We can almost always make something SAFER
  • 13. Safety Is Better Defined As…. A Judgement of the Acceptability of Risk
  • 15. OSHA METHOD 330 Incidents 29 Minor Injuries 1 Major or Loss-Time Accident
  • 17. Types of Accidents • FALL TO – same level – lower level • CAUGHT – in – on – between • CONTACT WITH – chemicals – electricity – heat/cold – radiation • BODILY REACTION FROM – voluntary motion – involuntary motion
  • 18. Types of Accidents (continued) • STRUCK – Against • stationary or moving object • protruding object • sharp or jagged edge – By • moving or flying object • falling object • RUBBED OR ABRADED BY – friction – pressure – vibration
  • 19. Fatal Accidents - Workplace U.S. WORKPLACE FATALITIES - 2006 1. Vehicle Accidents 2413 2. Contact With Objects and Equipment 983 3. Falls 809 4. Assaults & Violent Acts 754
  • 20. Fatal Accidents - Workplace Washington State FATALITIES - 2006 1. Vehicle Accidents 40 2. Contact With Objects and Equipment 13 3. Falls 19 4. Assaults & Violent Acts 4 NO NOTE: If you wish to normalize or compare the Washington data with the Federal data, just multiply the Washington numbers by 47 (based on population)
  • 21. Accident Causing Factors • Basic Causes – Management – Environmental – Equipment – Human Behavior • Indirect Causes – Unsafe Acts – Unsafe Conditions • Direct Causes – Slips, Trips, Falls – Caught In – Run Over – Chemical Exposure
  • 22. Policy & Procedures Environmental Conditions Equipment/Plant Design Human Behavior Slip/Trip Fall Energy Release Pinched Between Indirect Causes Direct Causes ACCIDENTACCIDENT Personal Injury Property Damage Potential/Actual Basic Causes Unsafe Acts Unsafe Conditions
  • 23. Basic Causes • Management • Environment • Equipment • Human Behavior Systems & Procedures Natural & Man-made Design & Equipment
  • 24. Management • Systems & Procedures – Lack of systems & procedures – Availability – Lack of Supervision
  • 25. Environment • Physical – Lighting – Temperature • Chemical – vapors – smoke • Biological –Bacteria –Reptiles
  • 27. Design and Equipment • Design – Workplace layout – Design of tools & equipment – Maintenance
  • 28. Design and Equipment • Equipment – Suitability – Stability • Guarding • Ergonomic • Accessibility
  • 29. Human Behavior Common to all accidents Not limited to person involved in accident
  • 30. Human Factors • Omissions & Commissions • Deviations from SOP – Lacking Authority – Short Cuts – Remove guards
  • 31. Competencies (how it needs to be done) Human Behavior is a function of : Activators (what needs to be done) Consequences (what happens if it is/isn’t done)
  • 32. ABC Model Antecedents (trigger behavior) Behavior (human performance) Consequences (either reinforce or punish behavior)
  • 33. •Positive Reinforcement (R+) ("Do this & you'll be rewarded") •Negative Reinforcement (R-) ("Do this or else you'll be penalized") Only 4 Types of Consequences: Behavior •Punishment (P) ("If you do this, you'll be penalized") •Extinction (E) ("Ignore it and it'll go away")
  • 34. Consequences Influence Behaviors Based Upon Individual Perceptions of:  Timing - immediate or future  Consistency - certain or uncertain • Significance {Magnitude Impact positive or negative
  • 35. Human Behavior • Behaviors that have consequences that are: • Soon • Certain • Positive Have a stronger effect on people’s behavior
  • 36. Some examples of Consequences:
  • 37. Why is one sign often ignored, the other one often followed?
  • 38. Human Behavior • Soon • A consequence that follows soon after a behavior has a stronger influence than consequences that occur later • Silence is considered to be consent • Failure to correct unsafe behavior influences employees to continue the behavior
  • 39. Human Behavior • Certain • A consequence that is certain to follow a behavior has more influence than an uncertain or unpredictable consequence • Corrective Action must be: – Prompt – Consistent – Persistent
  • 40. Human Behavior • Positive • A positive consequence influences behavior more powerfully than a negative consequence • Penalties and Punishment don’t work • Speeding Ticket Analogy
  • 41. Human Behavior • Example: Smokers find it hard to stop smoking because the consequences are: A) Soon (immediate) B) Certain (they happen every time) C) Positive (a nicotine high) The other consequences are: A) Late (years later) B) Uncertain (not all smokers get lung cancer) C) Negative (lung cancer)
  • 42. Deviations from SOP • No Safe Procedure • Employee Didn’t know Safe Procedure • Employee knew, did not follow Safe Procedure • Procedure encouraged risk-taking • Employee changed approved procedure
  • 43. Human Behavior • Thought Question: What would you do as a worker if you had to take 10-15 minutes to don the correct P.P.E. to enter an area to turn off a control valve which took 10 seconds?
  • 44. Human Behavior • Punishment or threatening workers is a behavioral method used by some Safety Management programs • Punishment only works if: – It is immediate – Occurs every time there is an unsafe behavior • This is very hard to do
  • 45. Human Behavior • The soon, certain, positive reinforcement from unsafe behavior outweighs the uncertain, late, negative reinforcement from inconsistent punishment • People tend to respond more positively to praise and social approval than any other factors
  • 46. Human Behavior • Some experts believe you can change worker’s safety behavior by changing their “Attitude” • Accident Report – “Safety Attitude” • A person’s “Attitude” toward any subject is linked with a set of other attitudes - Trying to change them all would be nearly impossible • A Behavior change leads to a new “Attitude” because people reduce tension between Behavior and their “Attitude”
  • 47. Are inside a person’s head -therefore they are not observable nor measurable Attitudes can be changed by changing behaviors however Attitudes
  • 48. Human Behavior • “Attention” Behavioral Safety approach – Focuses on getting workers to pay “Attention” – Inability to control “Attention” is a contributing factor in many injuries • You can’t scare workers into a safety focus with “Pay Attention” campaigns
  • 49. Reasons for Lack of Attention 1. Technology encourages short attention spans (TV remote, Computer Mouse) 2. Increased Job Stress caused by uncertainty (mergers & downsizing) 3. Lean staffing and increased workloads require quick attention shifts between tasks 4. Fast pace of work – little time to learn new tasks and do familiar ones safely
  • 50. Reasons for Lack of Attention 5. Work repetition can lull workers into a loss of attention 6. Low level of loyalty shown to employees by an ever reorganizing employer may lead to: a) Disinterested workers b) Detached workers (no connection to employer) c) Inattentive workers
  • 51. Human Behavior • Focusing on “Awareness” is a typical educational approach to change safety behavior • Example: You provide employees with a persuasive rationale for wearing safety glasses and hearing protection in certain work areas
  • 52. Human Behavior Developing Personal Safety Awareness A) Before starting, consider how to do job safely B) Understand required P.P.E. and how to use it C) Determine correct tools and ensure they are in good condition D) Scan work area – know what is going on E) As you work, check work position – reduce any strain F) Any unsafe act or condition should be corrected G) Remain aware of any changes in your workplace – people coming, going, etc. H) Talk to other workers about safety I) Take safety home with you
  • 53. Human Behavior Some Thought Questions: 1. Do you want to work safely? 2. Do you want others to work safely? 3. Do you want to learn how to prevent accidents/injuries? 4. How often do you think about safety as you work? 5. How often do you look for actions that could cause or prevent injuries?
  • 54. Human Behavior • More Thought Questions: a) Have you ever carried wood without wearing gloves? b) Have you ever left something in a walkway that was a tripping hazard? c) Have you ever carried a stack of boxes that blocked your view? d) Have you ever used a tool /equipment you didn’t know how to operate? e) Have you ever left a desk or file drawer open while you worked in an area? f) Have you ever placed something on a stair “Just for a minute”? g) Have you ever done anything unsafe because “I’ve always done it this way”?
  • 55. Human Behavior TIME! “All this safety stuff takes time doesn’t it”? “I’m too busy”! “I can’t possibly do all this”! “The boss wants the job done now”!
  • 56. Human Behavior • Does rushing through the job, working quickly without considering safety, really save time? • Remember – if an incident occurs, the job may not get done on time and someone could be injured – and that someone could be YOU!!
  • 57. Safety Intervention Strategies Approach # of Studies # of Subjects Reduction % Behavior Based 7 2,444 59.6% Ergonomics 3 n/a 51.6% Engineering Change 4 n/a 29.0% Problem Solving 1 76 20.0% Gov’t. Action 2 2 18.3% Mgt. Audits 4 n/a 17.0% Stress Management 2 1,300 15.0% Poster Campaign 26 100 14.0% Personnel Selection 26 19,177 3.7% Near-miss Reports 2 n/a 0%
  • 58. OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS NEGATIVE OUTCOMES POSITIVE OUTCOMES
  • 59. $ Direct Costs • Medical • Insurance • Lost Time • Fines
  • 60. Compliance • Failure to develop and implement a program may be cited as a SERIOUS violation (by itself or "Grouped" with other violations) Penalties (as high as $ 2,000) may be assessed
  • 61. Compliance • Up to 35% of the penalty can be deducted based upon an employer's "good faith“ - Good faith is based upon: – Awareness of the Law – Efforts to comply with the Law before the inspection – Correction of hazards during the inspection – Cooperation & Attitude during the inspection – Overall safety and health efforts including the Accident Prevention Program
  • 62. Indirect Costs • Injured, Lost Time Wages • Non-Injured, Lost Time Wages • Overtime • Supervisor Wages • Lost Bonuses • Employee Morale • Need For Counseling • Turn-over
  • 63. Indirect Costs • Equipment Rental • Cancelled Contracts • Lost Orders • Equipment/Material Damage • Investigation Team Time • Decreased Production • Light Duty • New Hire Learning Time • Administrative Time • Community Goodwill • Public/Customer Perception • 3rd Party Lawsuits
  • 65.
  • 66. OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS • POSITIVE ASPECTS – Accident investigation – Prevent repeat of accident – Improved safety programs – Improved procedures – Improved equipment design
  • 67. Accident Prevention Program • Must Be – Written – Tailored to particular hazards for a particular plant or operation • Minimum Elements – Safety Orientation Program – Safety and Health Committee
  • 68. Accident Prevention Program • Safety Orientation – Description of Total Safety Program – Safe Practices for Initial Job Assignment – How and When to Report Injuries – Location of First Aid Facilities in Workplace – How to Report Unsafe Conditions & Practices – Use and Care of PPE – Emergency Actions – Identification of hazardous materials
  • 69. Accident Prevention Program • Designated Safety and Health Committee – Management Representatives – Employee Elected Representatives • Max. 1 year • Must be equal # or more employee representatives than employer representatives – Elected Chairperson – Self-determine frequency of meetings • 1 hour or less unless majority votes – Minutes • Keep for 1 Year • Available for review by OSHA Personnel
  • 70. Accident Prevention Program • Safety Meeting instead of Safety Committee – If less than 11 employees • Total • Per shift • Per location – Meet at least once/month – 1 Management Representative
  • 71. Safety Meeting You Must – Review inspection reports – Evaluate accident investigations – Evaluate APP and discuss recommendations – Document attendance and topics
  • 73. Safety Committees They should meet as often as necessary This will depend on volume of production and conditions such as • Number of employees • Size of workplace covered • Nature of work undertaken on site • Type of hazards and degree of risk Meetings should not be cancelled Proactive Safety
  • 74. Safety Committees The Goal of the committee is to facilitate a safe workplace Objectives that guide a committee towards the goal include: Motivate, educate and train at all levels to ID, Reduce, & Avoid Hazards Incorporate safety into every aspect of the organization Create a culture where each person is responsible for safety of self and others Encourage and utilize ideas from all sources
  • 75. Four points to Remember: •Communication:Must be a loop system •Dedication: From everyone •Partnership: Between Management and Employees •Participation: An important part of team working.
  • 77. Safety Committee Policy Statement A written and publicized statement is an effective means of providing guidance and demonstrating commitment
  • 78. Safety Committee Focus • Long Term Goals – Objectives to Achieve – Time Frame • Short Term Goals – Assignments between Meetings – Work toward achieving Long-Term Plan
  • 79. Planning the Safety Meeting • Select topics • Set & post the agenda • Schedule safety meeting • Prepare meeting site • Encourage participation
  • 80. Conducting A Safety Meeting Provide an attendance list or sign in sheet Provide a meeting agenda Call meeting to order and review meeting topics Cover any old business Primary meeting topic Future agendas Close meeting and document
  • 81. Components of an Agenda Opening statement including reason for attendance, objective, and time commitment Items to be discussed Generate alternative solutions Decide among the alternatives Develop a plan to solve the problem Assign task to carry out plan Establish follow-up procedures Summarize and adjourn
  • 82. Regular Agenda Item • Review Policies & Plans such as: – Hazard Communication Program – Personal Protective Equipment – Respiratory Protection – Housekeeping – Machine Safeguarding – Safety Audits – Record Keeping – Emergency Response Plans
  • 83. Emergency Plan • Anticipate What Could Go Wrong and Plan for those Situations • Drill for Emergency Situations
  • 84. Emergency Action Plan • The following minimum elements shall be included : – Alarm Systems – Emergency escape procedures and route assignments; – Procedures for employees who remain to operate critical plant operations before evacuation – Procedures to account for all employees – Rescue and medical duties for those employees who are to perform them – The preferred means of reporting fires and other emergencies – Names / job titles of who can be contacted for further information or explanation of duties under the plan
  • 85. Record Keeping & Updating • Record each Recordable Injury & Illness on OSHA 300 Log w/in 6 Days – Recordable • Occupational fatalities • Lost workday • Result in light-duty or termination or require medical treatment (other than first aid) or involve loss of consciousness or restriction of work or motion • This information in posted every year from February 1 to April 30 in the OSHA 300A Summary
  • 86. Record Keeping and Updating • First Aid - one-time treatment that could be expected to be given by a person trained in basic first-aid using supplies from a first-aid kit and any follow-up visit or visits for the purpose of observation of the extent of treatment • NOTE: The new OSHA Recordkeeping Rule lists the specific First Aid Treatments
  • 87. Immediately Report: – Any accident that involves: 1. Injury 2. Illness 3. Equipment or property damage – Any near-misses. A near miss is an event that, strictly by chance, does not result in actual or observable injury, illness, death, or property damage. Examples: slips, trips & falls, compressed gas cylinder falling, overexposures to a chemical – Any hazards such as: Exposed electrical wires, Damaged PPE, Improper material storage, Improper chemical use, Horseplay, Damaged equipment, Missing or loose machine guards
  • 89. Hazard Analysis • Orderly process used to determine if a hazard exists in the workplace – Uncover hazards overlooked in design – Locate hazards developed in-process – Determine essential steps of a job – Identify hazards that result from the performance of the actual job
  • 90. Step 1: Identify Hazards HAZARD – condition with the potential to cause personal injury, death and property damage
  • 91. Hazard Identification • Review Records • Talk to Personnel • Accident Investigations • Follow Process Flow • Write a Job Safety Analysis • Use Inspection Checklists
  • 92. STEP 2: Assess Hazards • Probability - How likely is the hazard? – Likely – Not likely • Severity - What will happen if encountered? – Death – Serious Injury – Damage to property
  • 93. Levels of Risk Awareness • Unaware: Doesn’t realize at-risk • Post-Awareness: Realizes Risk After Task Completion • Engaged-Awareness: Recognizes Risk While Performing Task(s) and corrects the situation • Proactive-Awareness: Foresee Hazards and Begins Task Only When Safe to Proceed
  • 94. Who is at Risk? • Workers • Visitors – Invited • Customers • Emergency services • Delivery drivers – Uninvited • Trespassers • Burglars ♦ Contractors ♦ Janitorial ♦ Maintenance ♦ Others ♦ Members of Public ♦ Passers-by ♦ Neighbors
  • 95. STEP 3: Make Risk Decisions What can we do to reduce the risk? Does the benefit outweigh the risk?
  • 96. STEP 4: Implement Controls • Substitution • Engineering controls • Administrative Controls • Personal Protective Equipment
  • 99. Engineering Hazard Elimination Add-On Safety Design “Active” vs. “Passive” User Instructions (Manual) Ventilation Design/Layout Safety Devices
  • 100. Administrative • Safety Rules • Disciplinary Policy - Accountability • Preventative Maintenance • Training • Proficiency/Knowledge Demonstrations
  • 101. Step 5: Supervise • Ensure risk control measures are implemented • Track progress • Feedback
  • 103. Job Safety Analysis • Break down a task into its component steps • Determine hazards connected with each key step • Identify methods to prevent or protect against the hazard
  • 105. Job Safety Analysis Priorities • New JobsNew Jobs • Potential of Severe InjuriesPotential of Severe Injuries • History of Disabling InjuriesHistory of Disabling Injuries • Frequency of AccidentsFrequency of Accidents
  • 106. Observation of the Actual Work • Select experienced worker(s) to participate in the JSA process • Explain purpose of JSA • Observe the employee perform the job and write down basic steps • Completely describe each step • Note any deviations (Very Important!)
  • 107. Identify Hazards & Potential Accidents • Search for Hazards – Produced by Work – Produced by Environment • Repeat job observation as many times as necessary to identify all hazards
  • 108. Key Steps TOO MUCH Changing a Flat Tire • Pull off road • Put car in “park” • Set brake • Activate emergency flashers • Open door • Get out of car • Walk to trunk • Put key in lock • Open trunk • Remove jack • Remove Spare tire
  • 109. Key Steps NOT ENOUGH Changing a Flat Tire • Park car • Take off flat tire • Put on spare tire • Drive away
  • 110. Key Job Steps JUST RIGHT Changing a Flat Tire • Park & set brake • Remove jack & tire from trunk • Loosen lug nuts • Jack up car • Remove tire • Set new tire • Jack down car • Tighten lug nuts • Store tire & jack
  • 111. Job Safety Analysis • Steps – Park & set brake – Remove Spare & Jack – Loosen lugs
  • 112. Job Safety Analysis • Hazards – Hit by traffic – Back Strain – Foot/Toe impact – Shoulder strain • Steps – Park & set brake – Remove Spare & Jack – Loosen lugs
  • 113. Job Safety Analysis • Hazards – Hit by traffic – Back Strain – Foot/Toe impact – Shoulder strain • Steps – Park & set brake – Remove Spare & Jack – Loosen lugs • Prevention – Far off road as possible – Pull items close before lift – Lift in increments – Lift and lower using leg power – Wide leg stance – Use full body, not arm/shoulder
  • 114. Develop Solutions • Find a new way to do job • Change physical conditions that create hazards • Change the work procedure • Reduce frequency • Fix-A-Flat • No off-road driving • Buy self-sealing tires • Maintenance / Change-out program
  • 117. Inspections • Fact-Finding vs. Fault Finding – Sound knowledge of the plant – Knowledge of relevant standards & codes – Systematic inspection steps – Method of evaluating data
  • 118. Inspection Limitations • “Blinder affect” • Rote inspections • All Check - No action • Who is inspecting?
  • 119. Outcomes • Improve Safety – New Way to Do Job – Change Physical Conditions – Change Work Procedures – Reduce Frequency of Dangerous Job
  • 120. New Way To Do The Job • Determine the work goal of the job, and then analyze the various ways of reaching this goal to see which way is safest • Consider work saving tools and equipment
  • 121. Change in Physical Conditions • Tools, materials, equipment layout or location • Study change carefully for other benefits (costs, time savings)
  • 122. Change in Work Procedures • What should the worker do to eliminate the hazard? • How should it be done? • Document changes in detail
  • 123. Reduce Frequency of Dangerous Job • What can be done to reduce the frequency of the job?? • Identify parts that cause frequent repairs - change • Reduce vibration save machine parts
  • 125. Guide for Personal Audits The guide has five steps • Audit • React • Communicate • Follow up • Raise standards
  • 126. Audit • Get into one of the work areas on a regular basis • Develop your own system • Do not combine a safety audit with other visits • Audit must be designed to evaluate safety • Take notes
  • 127. React • How you react is the strongest element in improving the safety culture • Your reaction tells what is acceptable and not acceptable • You must come away from each inspection with a reaction: 1. Acceptable because... 2. Not acceptable because... 3. Deteriorated because... 4. Improved because…
  • 128. Communicate • In order for the contact to be productive, your subordinate/co-worker must understand that: You inspected his or her area You are pleased (or displeased) with what you saw because of… You expect him or her to react to your comments and to improve You will audit the area again in a specified number of days
  • 129. Follow Up • Critical for success of the safety program • Allows you to demonstrate that it is important • Must communicate your assessment to the employees
  • 130. Raise Standards • Will see improvement if the first four steps are followed • Keep raising your expectations and help provide leadership • Solve the obvious problems then fine tune the safety and housekeeping efforts
  • 131. Key Points: Becoming a Good Observer • Effective observation includes: Be selective Know what to look for Practice Keep an open mind Guard against habit and familiarity Do not be satisfied with general impressions Record observations systematically
  • 132. Observation Techniques To become a good observer, a person must: • Stop for 10 to 30 seconds before entering an area to ascertain where employees are working • Be alert for unsafe practices • Observe activity -- do not avoid the action
  • 133. Observation Techniques • Remember ABBI -- look Above, Below, Behind, Inside • Develop a questioning attitude • Use all senses • sight • hearing • smell • touch
  • 134. Inspections and Field Observations • Use a checklist • Ask questions • Take notes • Respect lines of communication • Draw conclusions
  • 135. Unsafe Acts • Conduct that unnecessarily increases the likelihood of injury • All safety rule and procedure violations are unsafe acts • All unsafe acts should be corrected immediately
  • 136. Unsafe Conditions • An unsafe condition is a situation, not directly caused by the action or inaction of one or more employees, in an area that may lead to an incident or injury if uncorrected • Unsafe conditions are normally beyond the direct control of employees in the area where the condition is observed
  • 137. Audit Practices • Concentrate on people and their actions because actions of people account for more than 96 percent of all injuries  When to audit  Where to audit  How much to audit  Auditing contractors
  • 138.
  • 139. Management Commitment Should Management Consider Safety as a Priority in Conducting Business ??
  • 142. Employee Participation • Accident Prevention Plan Development • Safety Committee • Safety Bulletin Board • Crew-Leader • Day-to-Day Knowledge comes from where the work is actually done and hazards actually exist.
  • 144. AVAILABLE RESOURCES • OSHA Website: www.osha.gov • Washington State Labor & Industries Website: www.lni.wa.gov
  • 146. INTRODUCTION • Thousands of accidents occur throughout the United States every day • Accident investigations determine how and why these failures occur • Conduct accident investigations with accident prevention in mind - Investigations are NOT to place blame • Investigate all accidents regardless of the extent of injury or damage
  • 147. THE ACCIDENT WHAT IS AN ACCIDENT?
  • 148. THE ACCIDENT An unplanned and unwelcome event that interrupts normal activity
  • 149. Accidents are What Happens to Somebody Else BUT REMEMBER: YOU are somebody else to somebody else
  • 150. THE ACCIDENT MINOR ACCIDENTS: • Such as paper cuts to fingers or dropping a box of materials
  • 151. THE ACCIDENT MORE SERIOUS ACCIDENTS • Such as a forklift dropping a load or someone falling off a ladder
  • 152. THE ACCIDENT • Accidents that occur over an extended time frame: – Such as hearing loss or an illness resulting from exposure to chemicals
  • 153. THE ACCIDENT NEAR-MISS • Also know as a “Near Hit” • An accident that does not quite result in injury or damage (but could have) • Remember, a near-miss is just as serious as an accident!
  • 154. THE ACCIDENT ACCIDENTS HAVE TWO THINGS IN COMMON
  • 155. THE ACCIDENT They all have outcomes from the accident
  • 156. THE ACCIDENT They all have contributory factors that cause the accident
  • 157.
  • 158. OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS • NEGATIVE Results – Injury & possible death – Disease – Damage to equipment & property – Litigation costs, possible citations – Lost productivity – Morale
  • 159. OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS • POSITIVE Results – Accident investigation – Prevent repeat of accident – Change to safety programs – Change to procedures – Change to equipment design
  • 160. ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION • Accidents are usually complex • An accident may have 10 or more events that can be causes • A detailed analysis of an accident will normally reveal three cause levels: – direct – indirect – root
  • 161. Direct Cause • An accident results only when a person or object receives an amount of energy or hazardous material that cannot be absorbed safely - This energy or hazardous material is the DIRECT CAUSE of the accident The direct cause is usually the result of one or more unsafe acts or unsafe conditions or both
  • 162. Indirect and Root Causes • Unsafe acts and conditions are the indirect causes or symptoms of accidents • Indirect causes are usually traceable to: – poor management policies and decisions – personal or environmental factors • Root causes are the actual policies and decisions by management and the actual personal and environmental factors of the workplace
  • 163. ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION • Conduct a preliminary investigation for: – serious injuries with immediate symptoms • Document the investigation findings You Must:
  • 164. ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION • Do Not move equipment involved in a work or work related accident or incident if : – A death – A probable death – 3 or more employees are sent to the hospital (WISHA -2) • Unless, Moving the equipment is necessary to: – Remove any victims – Prevent further incidents and injuries
  • 165. ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION • Within 8 hours of a work-related incident or accident you must contact the nearest office of the OSHA in person or by phone to report – A death – A probable death – 3 or more employees are sent to the hospital (WISHA -2) • (OSHA) 1-800-321-6742 • WISHA 1-800-4BE-SAFE (423-7233)
  • 166. ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION • Assign witnesses and other employees to assist OSHA personnel who arrive to investigate the incident Include: – The immediate supervisor – Employees who were witnesses to the incident – Other employees the investigator feels are necessary to complete the investigation
  • 167. ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION •Make sure your preliminary investigation is conducted by the following people: – A person designated by the employer – The immediate supervisor – Witnesses – An employee representative – Other persons with experience and skills to evaluate the facts
  • 168. ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION A preliminary investigation includes noting information such as the following: –Where did the accident or incident occur? –What time did it occur? –What people were present? –What was the employee doing at the time? –What happened during the accident or
  • 169. ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION Provide the following information to OSHA within 30 days concerning any accident involving a fatality or hospitalization of 3 or more employees: – Name of the work place – Location of the incident – Time and date of the incident – Number of fatalities or hospitalized employees – Contact person – Phone number – Brief description of the incident
  • 170. Why Not Rely On OSHA & Police To Investigate? • Focus On Culpability • Minor Accidents Not Investigated • PREVENTION • Protect Company Interests • OSHA Requirements
  • 171. Investigating Accidents How to find out what really happened
  • 172. Why Investigate Accidents? • Find the cause • Prevent similar accidents • Protect company interests
  • 173. Acts Conditions Near Misses Minor Injuries Reportable Injury Lost Time Injury Death Knowledge Ability Motivation Design Maintenance Action of Others At which level do we investigate?
  • 174. Investigation Strategy • Need For InvestigationNeed For Investigation • Control the SceneControl the Scene • Gather FactsGather Facts • Analyze DataAnalyze Data • Establish CausesEstablish Causes • Write ReportWrite Report • Take Corrective ActionTake Corrective Action
  • 175. Investigative Procedures • The actual procedures used in a particular investigation depend on the nature and results of the accident • All investigations start with a collection of data and are followed by analysis of that data • An investigation is not complete until all data is analyzed and a final report is completed
  • 176. The Aim of the Investigation • The key result should be to prevent a repeat of the same accident • Fact finding: – What happened? – What was the root cause? – What should be done to prevent repeat of the accident?
  • 177. The Aim of the Investigation IS NOT TO: • Exonerate individuals or management • Satisfy insurance requirements • Defend a position for legal argument • Or, to assign blame
  • 181. COMPANY ACCIDENT FORMS • Must be filled out completely by the employee and employee’s immediate supervisor (this includes foremen) • Must be turned in to Safety within 24 hours of incident
  • 182. BENEFITS OF ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION • Prevent repeat of the accident • Identifying outmoded procedures • Improvements to the work environment • Increased productivity • Improvement of operational & safety procedures • Raise safety awareness level
  • 183. BENEFITS OF ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION • WHEN AN ORGANIZATION REACTS SWIFTLY AND POSITIVELY TO ACCIDENTS AND INJURIES, ITS ACTIONS REAFFIRM ITS COMMITMENT TO THE SAFETY AND WELL-BEING OF ITS EMPLOYEES!
  • 184. Who Should Investigate? Investigation TEAM • Employer Designee (Management) • Immediate Supervisor of affected area/personnel • Experts (if needed) • Employee Representative (one of the following:) – Employee selected representative – Employee representative of safety committee – Union representative or shop steward
  • 185. **Immediate Actions • Assess the scene • CALL 911 • Activate In-House Response • Scene Safety • Provide Aid to Injured • Provide Assistance to Affected • Secure the Scene of Accident
  • 186. Isolate the Scene • Barricade the area of the accident, and keep everyone out! • The only persons allowed inside the barricade should be Rescue/EMS, law enforcement, and investigators • Protect the evidence until investigation is complete
  • 187. Provide Care to the Injured • Ensure that medical care is provided to the injured people before proceeding with the investigation
  • 188. Secure the Scene for Safety • Eliminate the hazards: – Control chemicals – De-energize – De-pressurize – Light it up – Shore it up – Ventilate
  • 189. Fact Finding • Gather evidence from many sources during an investigation • Get information from witnesses and reports as well as by observation • Don’t try to analyze data as evidence is gathered
  • 190. Gather Evidence • Examine the accident scene - Look for things that will help you understand what happened: – Dents, cracks, scrapes, splits, etc. in equipment – Tire tracks, footprints, etc. – Spills or leaks – Scattered or broken parts – Any other possible evidence
  • 191. Gather Evidence • Diagram the scene: – Use blank paper or graph paper. Mark the location of all pertinent items; equipment, parts, spills, persons, etc. – Note distances and sizes, pressures and temperatures – Note direction (mark north on the map)
  • 192. Gather Evidence • Take photographs – Photograph any items or scenes which may provide an understanding of what happened to anyone who was not there – Photograph any items which will not remain, or which will be cleaned up (spills, tire tracks, footprints, etc.) – 35mm cameras, Polaroids, and video cameras are all acceptable • Digital cameras are not recommended - digital images can be easily altered
  • 193. Photographs • Unbiased Recording • Keep Log of Photos • Overall to Close-up • Color if possible • Supplement with Video
  • 194. Gather Data • Data includes: – Persons involved – Date, time, location – Activities at time of accident – Equipment involved – List of witnesses
  • 195. Review Records • Check training records – Was appropriate training provided? – When was training provided? • Check equipment maintenance records – Is regular PM or service provided? – Is there a recurring type of failure? • Check accident records – Have there been similar incidents or injuries involving other employees?
  • 196. Documents • Collect All Related Documents – Inspection Logs – Policy & Procedures Manual – JSA (Job Safety Analysis) – Equipment Operations Manuals – Insurance Records – Employee Records – Police Reports
  • 197. Those who do not know the past are destined to: Repeat Repeat Repeat Repeat Repeat Repeat It.
  • 198. ISOLATE FACT FROM FICTION • Use NORMS-based analysis of information – Not an interpretation – Observable – Reliable – Measurable – Specific • If an item meets all five of above, it is a fact
  • 199. NORMS OF OBJECTIVITY Objective Not an Interpretation - Based on a factual description. Observable - Based on what is seen or heard. Reliable - Two or more people independently agree on what they observed. Measurable - A number is used to describe behavior or situation. Specific - Based on detailed definitions of what happened. Subjective Interpretations - Based on personal interpretations/biases. Non-observable - Based on events not directly observed. Unreliable - Two or more people don’t agree on what they observed. Non-Measurable - A number isn’t used. General - Based on non- detailed descriptions.
  • 200. INVESTIGATION TRAPS • Put your emotions aside! – Don’t let your feelings interfere - stick to the facts! • Do not pre-judge – Find out the what really happened – Do not let your beliefs cloud the facts • Never assume anything • Do not make any judgements
  • 201. Record Evidence • Keep All Notes in Bound Notebook • Include Date - Time - Place – Vantage Point • Keep Originals • Rewrite in Report Form
  • 202. Samples • Collect Perishables First • Fluids • Open Containers • Filings • Chemicals • Air
  • 203. Interviews • Experienced personnel should conduct interviews • If possible the team assigned to this task should include an individual with a legal background • After interviewing all witnesses, the team should analyze each witness' statement
  • 204. Interviews • Analyze this information along with data from the accident site • Not all people react in the same manner to a particular stimulus • A witness who has had a traumatic experience may not be able to recall the details of the accident • A witness who has a vested interest in the results of the investigation may offer biased testimony
  • 205. Interviews • Excellent Source of first hand knowledge • May Present Pitfalls in form of: – Bias – Perspective – Embellishment – Omissions
  • 206. Ask “What Happened” • Get a brief overview of the situation from witnesses and victims • Not a detailed report yet, just enough to understand the basics of what happened
  • 207. Interview Victims & Witnesses • Interview as soon as possible after the incident – Do not interrupt medical care to interview • Interview each person separately • Do not allow witnesses to confer prior to interview
  • 208. The Interview • Put the person at ease – People may be reluctant to discuss the incident, particularly if they think someone will get in trouble • Reassure them that this is a fact-finding process only – Remind them that these facts will be used to prevent a recurrence of the incident
  • 209. The Interview • Take Notes! • Ask open-ended questions – “What did you see?” – “What happened?” • Do not make suggestions – If the person is stumbling over a word or concept, do not help them out
  • 210. The Interview • Use closed-ended questions later to gain more detail – After the person has provided their explanation, these type of questions can be used to clarify – “Where were you standing?” – “What time did it happen?”
  • 211. The Interview • Don’t ask leading questions – Bad: “Why was the forklift operator driving recklessly?” – Good: “How was the forklift operator driving?” • If the witness begins to offer reasons, excuses, or explanations, politely decline that knowledge and remind them to stick with the facts
  • 212. The Interview • Summarize what you have been told – Correct misunderstandings of the events between you and the witness • Ask the witness/victim for recommendations to prevent recurrence – These people will often have the best solutions to the problem
  • 213. The Interview • Get a written, signed statement from the witness – It is best if the witness writes their own statement; interview notes signed by the witness may be used if the witness refuses to write a statement
  • 214. Ask All Witnesses • Name, address, phone number • What did you see? • What did you hear? • Where were you standing/sitting? • What do you think caused the accident? • Was there anything different today?
  • 215. Ask Supervisors • What is normal procedure for activities involved in the accident? • What type of training persons involved in accident have had? • What, if anything was different today? • What they think caused the accident? • What could have prevented the accident?
  • 216. Witness Interviews DO • Separate Witnesses • Written Statements • Open ended questions • Provide Diagrams • Encourage Details • Show Concern • Record w/permission DON’T • Suggest Answers • Interrogate • Focus on Blame • Dismiss Details • Bar Emotions • Make Judgments
  • 217. Analysis of Accident Causes • Immediate Causes • What was done? • What was not done? • What hazardous condition existed? • Root Causes • Why did they do this? • Why didn’t they do that? • Why did the unsafe condition exist? • Why wasn’t it corrected?
  • 218. Analyze Data • Gather all photos, drawings, interview material and other information collected at the scene • Determine a clear picture of what happened • Formally document sequence of events
  • 219. CONTRIBUTING FACTORS INVESTIGATION STRATEGY • INVESTIGATION TEAM • EVALUATES ALL FACTORS CONCERNED • ISOLATES THE KEY FACTOR(S) BY ASKING THE FOLLOWING QUESTION.... • WOULD THE ACCIDENT HAVE HAPPENED IF THIS PARTICULAR FACTOR WAS NOT PRESENT?
  • 220. DETERMINE CAUSES • Employee actions • Safe behavior, at-risk behavior • Environmental conditions • Lighting, heat/cold, moisture/humidity, dust, vapors, etc. • Equipment condition • Defective/operational, guards, leaks, broken parts, etc. • Procedures • Existing (or not), followed (or not), appropriate (or not) • Training • Was employee trained - when, by whom, documentation
  • 221. Indirect Causes • Unsafe conditions – what material conditions, environmental conditions and equipment conditions contributed to the accident • Unsafe Acts – what activities contributed to the accident
  • 222. Breakdown of Unsafe Conditions • Inadequately guarded or unguarded equipment • Defective tools, equipment or materials • Fire and explosion hazard • Unexpected movement hazard • Projection hazards
  • 223. Breakdown of Unsafe Conditions • Housekeeping • Hazardous environmental conditions • Improper ventilation • Improper illumination • Unsafe dress or apparel
  • 224. Breakdown of Unsafe Acts • Operating without authority • Operating or working at unsafe speeds • Making safety devices inoperative • Using unsafe equipment • Neglecting to wear PPE • Unsafe loading, placing, mixing, combining • Taking unsafe position or posture
  • 225. Basic Causes • Management • Environment • Equipment • Human Behavior Systems & Procedures Design & Equipment
  • 226. Management • Was a hazard assessment conducted? • Were the hazards recognized? • Was control of the hazards addressed? • Were employees trained? • Did supervision detect/correct deviations? • Was Supervisor trained in job/accident prevention? • What were the production rates?
  • 227. FIND ROOT CAUSES • When you have determined the contributing factors, dig deeper! – If employee error, what caused that behavior? – If defective machine, why wasn’t it fixed? – If poor lighting, why not corrected? – If no training, why not?
  • 228. Contribution of Safety Controls such as: • Engineering Controls - machine guards, safety controls, isolation of hazardous areas, monitoring devices, etc. • Administrative Controls - procedures, assessments, inspection, records to monitor and ensure safe practices and environments are maintained. • Training Controls - initial new hire safety orientation, job specific safety training and periodic refresher training.
  • 229. What controls failed? • List the specific engineering, administrative and training controls that failed and how these failures contributed to the accident
  • 230. What controls worked? • List any controls that prevented a more serious accident or minimized collateral damage or injuries
  • 231. Determine • What was not normal before the accident • Where the abnormality occurred • When it was first noted • How it occurred
  • 232. Report Causes • Analysis of the Accident – HOW & WHY a. Direct causes (energy sources; hazardous materials) b. Indirect causes (unsafe acts and conditions) c. Basic causes (management policies; personal or environmental factors)
  • 233. Unable to Identify Root Causes • Timeliness • Poor development of information • Reluctance to accept responsibility • Narrow interpretations of environmental causes • Erroneous emphasis on a single cause • Allowing solutions to determine causes • Wrong person(s) investigating
  • 234. PREPARE A REPORT • Accident Reports should contain the following: – Description of incident and injuries – Sequence of events – Pertinent facts discovered during investigation – Conclusions of the investigator(s) – Recommendations for correcting problems
  • 235. PREPARE A REPORT, (CONT.) • Be objective! – State facts – Assign cause(s), not blame – If referring to an individual’s actions, don’t use names in the recommendation • Good: All employees should……. • Bad: George should……..
  • 236. Recommendations • Action to remedy – Basic causes – Indirect causes – Direct causes • Recommendations - as a result of the finding is there a need to make changes to: – Employee training? – Work Stations Design? – Policies or procedures?
  • 237. Recommendations • Consider -Effectiveness -Cost -Feasibility -Effect on Productivity -Time to Implement -Employee Acceptance -Management Acceptance
  • 238. Accepting Inadequate Reports • There is no surer way to destroy a program's effectiveness than to accept substandard work • This immediately sends a signal to subordinates that accident investigation is not a high priority and does not receive significant attention from management
  • 239. Common Problems • Accidents not reported • Unable to identify basic causes • Accepting inadequate reports • Neglecting to implement corrective actions
  • 240. Accidents Not Reported • Nothing is learned from unreported accidents • Accident causes are left uncorrected • Infections and injury aggravations result • Neglecting to report tends to spread and become a common practice
  • 241. Why Workers Fail to Report • Fear of discipline • Concern for reputation • Fear of medical treatment • Desire to keep personal record clean • Avoidance of red tape • Concern about attitudes of others • Poor understanding of importance
  • 242. Combat Reporting Problems • Indoctrinate new employees • Encourage workers to report minor accidents • Focus on accident prevention and loss control • Be positive • Discuss past accidents • Take corrective action promptly
  • 243. Neglecting to Implement Corrective Action • The whole purpose of the investigation process is negated if management fails to remedy the causes • Here again, management sends a signal to subordinates that it's not important, and subordinates develop the attitude that it's an exercise in futility and "why bother?
  • 244. Improving the Quality of Accident Investigation • Insist on reporting of all injuries • Adopt a well-designed accident report form • Train all levels of management • Insist on the investigation of all accidents • Participate actively in serious accident investigations
  • 245. Improving the Quality of Accident Investigation • Review and comment • Refuse to accept inadequate reports • Establish controls to follow up on corrective actions • Be responsive to recommendations • Hold responsible persons accountable • Emphasize that accident investigations are FACT-finding, not FAULT-finding • Encourage investigators to challenge the system
  • 246. Summary • Most accident investigations follow formal procedures • An investigation is not concluded until completion of a final report • A successful accident investigation determines what happened and how and why the accident occurred • Investigations are an effort to prevent a similar or perhaps more disastrous sequence of events
  • 248. Problem Solving Fault Tree • Deductive, top-down method of analyzing • Identify all elements that could cause Accident • Performed graphically using AND and OR gates • Create symbolic representation of events resulting in the Accident • Entire system and human interactions are analyzed
  • 249. Problem Solving Fault Tree W e t F lo o r E n v iro n m e n ta l S u d d e n R e le a s e N o P re s h ift In s p e c tio n S lo w L e a k B re a k L in e L e a k N o F lu id B ra k e s F a il S te e rin g F a ils E q u ip m e n t N o T ra in in g P ro c e d u ra l N o T ra in in g D id N o t K n o w In te n tio n a l O m is s io n N o In s p e c tio n H u m a n F a ilu re T o S to p P IT H its W a ll
  • 250. Problem Solving Fault Tree S u d d e n R e le a s e N o P re sh ift In sp e c tio n S lo w L e a k B re a k L in e L e a k N o F lu id B ra k e s F a il E q u ip m e n t N O T R A IN IN G S u p v . s ic k S u p .R e s p . T ra in in g R e q 'd P ro c e d u ra l T ra in in g N o t R e c e ive d D id N o t K n o w T im e ltd . In te n tio n a l O m is s io n D id n o t C o n d u c t In s p e c tio n H u m a n F a ilu re T o S to p P IT H its W a ll
  • 252. FIVE WHYs DIAGRAM Undesired Event Why? Direct Cause Why? Contributing Cause Why? Contributing Cause Why? Contributing Cause Why? Root Cause
  • 253.
  • 255. TEST

Notas del editor

  1. Get Class Ideas as to what an “Accident” is.
  2. Get Class Ideas as to what an “Accident” is.
  3. Unsafe Conditions – examples Poor housekeeping , Blocked walkways, Improper or damaged PPE Machine guards removed, Exposed electrical wires Slippery floors, Physical Factors – noise, vibration, illumination, temperature extremes Chemical Factors – exposures that may impair a worker’s skill, reactions, Judgment Ergonomic Factors –workstation design, habits,
  4. More people are injured or killed each day while driving their automobiles. Driving a car is risky. We accept that risk, WHY? Rules in place to protect us (Engineering and Administrative) Equipment in place to protect us (Engineering and PPE) Training in place to protect us. (Administrative) Perceive the benefits outweigh the risks
  5. Some 6,023 fatal work injuries occurred during 1999, nearly the same as 1998’s total, though more people were employed in 1999. Decreases in job-related deaths from homicides and electrocutions in 1999 were offset by increases from workers struck by falling objects or caught in running machinery. Washington state Transportation Accidents (43%) Contact w/objects & Equipment (25%) Falls (10%) Homicide (10%) Homicides fell from the second-leading cause of fatal work injuries to the third, behind highway fatalities, which remained the number one occupational killer, and falls.  
  6. Some 6,023 fatal work injuries occurred during 1999, nearly the same as 1998’s total, though more people were employed in 1999. Decreases in job-related deaths from homicides and electrocutions in 1999 were offset by increases from workers struck by falling objects or caught in running machinery. Washington state Transportation Accidents (43%) Contact w/objects & Equipment (25%) Falls (10%) Homicide (10%) Homicides fell from the second-leading cause of fatal work injuries to the third, behind highway fatalities, which remained the number one occupational killer, and falls.  
  7. Normally three cause levels: Most accidents are preventable by eliminating one or more causes. At the lowest level, an accident results only when a person or object receives an amount of energy or hazardous material that cannot be absorbed safely. This energy or hazardous material is the DIRECT CAUSE of the accident. The direct cause is usually the result of one or more unsafe acts or unsafe conditions, or both. Unsafe acts and conditions are the INDIRECT CAUSES or symptoms. In turn, indirect causes are usually traceable to poor management policies and decisions, or to personal or environmental factors. These are the BASIC CAUSES.
  8. Accidents are usually complex. May have10 or more events that can be causes.
  9. Unsafe Acts - examples Unauthorized operation or repair of equipment, Running - Horse Play, Not following procedures Improper use of chemicals By-passing safety devices, Not using protective equipment, influence of drugs or alcohol, Improper lifting, Not cleaning up spills immediately REAL CONCERN IS WHY THE DEVIATION OCCURRED. 1. No known standard for safe job procedure --Perform JSA and develop good JIT 2.Employee did not know the safe procedures --Train in the correct procedure 3.Employee knew, bud did not follow safe procedures;Work pressure, difficulty , time consuming, prior success Countermeasure: Employee performance evaluation, test validity of procedure, counsel employees/manager’s, change work procedures, job requirements, Train 4.Employee knew and followed safe procedures --Develop safe procedures - train 5.Procedure encouraged risk-taking (incentive pay) --Change unsafe job design, procedure or incentive program 6.Employee changed the approved procedure or bypassed safety equipment--Evaulate safety measures, change safety methods so they can not be bypassed 7.Individual Characteristics -- Counsel employees, consider change in work procedures, workstation design or job requirements, in-depth training. Unsafe Acts - system approach. Management and Worker Responsibility
  10. management needs to understand the forces that drive human behavior. The three forces are: activators, competencies, and consequences. Activators precede behavior. If activators are effective then they get the right behaviors started. Competencies are the skills and abilities that people possess now or will need to posses in order to perform the desired functions. Competencies are demonstrated on the job in the form of behaviors. Consequences are the most powerful force. The consequences of a person’s actions determine whether he or she will continue or increase the desired behavior or discontinue or decrease it. The challenge is to use consequences in a strategic and honest way in order to create a win/win situation for everyone, not a win/win for some and a win/lose situation for others.
  11. The ABC model of behavior change has 3 components that lend it it’s name: Antecedents (also frequently referred to as activators) are objects, people, sensory perceptions, or environmental stimuli that serve as the trigger for a particular behavior. For example, seeing a stop sign is a trigger for a driver to slow down and cover the brake before coming to a stop. Behavior, as we have already said, is anything that you are able to observe a person do - walk, sit, stand, grasp, lift, read, sleep, etc.. Consequences are what the person who performs the behavior perceives or actually receives when he/she demonstrates a particular behavior. Consequences can either reinforce behavior (leading to an increase in performance) or punish or work to make the behavior extinct (leading to a decrease in performance).
  12. Key Concepts Extinction (essentially there’s no consequence). Seldom used in business to decrease undesired safety behaviors, but commonly (unknowingly) used to decrease desired safety behaviors. (Mgrs./Peers never saying thanks for cleaning up that spill/picking up that tool etc.) Crying Baby example. Punishment: Very effective & essential -- there always will be behaviors that cannot be tolerated. We need to understand how the punishment affects the person being punished. WHEN WOULD YOU USE PUNISHMENT? (Severe situations, repeated violations, knowingly disregard) Positive and Negative Reinforcement can both increase behavior, but Positive gives the benefit of discretionary effort. Positive Reinforcement is not necessarily always beneficial: it can increase undesired behavior as well (ex: peer support for violating safety rules, slack enforcement results in +reinforcement to continue bad behavior) Consequences are negative or positive based upon receiver’s perception, not sender’s intent
  13. Consequences influence behavior based upon three factors: timing, consistency, and significance. Significance is dependent on magnitude and impact. The different combinations of these factors will determine the likelihood of behavior increasing or decreasing in the future. Timing: Is the consequence immediate or does it happen in the future? For example, the consequence of putting your hand on a red hot burner on the stove is immediate - pain!! The consequence of not exercising for most of your adult life is not so immediate. Poor health in old age may come years down the road from now. More Timely the consequence the more influencing/effective. Consistency: Is the consequence certain to happen or is there uncertainty? For example, if everyone who smoked cigarettes was guaranteed that by the time they had smoked their third cigarette they would have developed lung cancer, you’d have a lot less smokers. Because of the high degree of uncertainty of contracting lung cancer due to smoking, many people still smoke. Significance refers to whether the consequence is viewed as positive or negative by the person who receives the consequence. If I find that a friendly pat on the back by my boss is a positive stroke, another female co-worker may see that hand on her shoulder as a sign of sexual harassment - very negative. Significance means is the consequence of large or small magnitude and what impact does it have on the person receiving it.
  14. 1. No known standard for safe job procedure --Perform JSA and develop good JIT 2.Employee did not know the safe procedures --Train in the correct procedure 3.Employee knew, bud did not follow safe procedures;Work pressure, difficulty , time consuming, prior success Countermeasure: Employee performance evaluation, test validity of procedure, counsel employees/manager’s, change work procedures, job requirements, Train 4.Employee knew and followed safe procedures --Develop safe procedures - train 5.Procedure encouraged risk-taking (incentive pay) --Change unsafe job design, procedure or incentive program 6.Employee changed the approved procedure or bypassed safety equipment--Evaulate safety measures, change safety methods so they can not be bypassed 7.Individual Characteristics -- Counsel employees, consider change in work procedures, workstation design or job requirements, in-depth training.
  15. We often hear managers talk about an employee having a “bad attitude towards safety” or a “bad attitude about work in general” or that an employee “has a good attitude towards his/her job.” These statements reflect an overall perception that has been formed by observing a series of behaviors over time. Unfortunately they are not precise enough statements to allow us to pinpoint the specific behaviors that were being observed over time that led to this perception. You cannot see a person’s attitude. You can see his/her behaviors and form an opinion on what is causing that “attitude” but you can never be 100% certain that you are right. If our perception of a person’s attitude is based on our observation of his/her behaviors, remember that we just said that we can manage behaviors. If we can manage behaviors effectively enough we can get people to perform differently. If they perform differently long enough and are provided with positive reinforcement for their behavior changes, their attitude towards a particular work task will begin to change. How we manage behaviors will determine if that attitude change takes place quickly or slowly. If we use the technique of positive reinforcement we are likely to see the most rapid change. If we use mostly negative reinforcement and punishment we will probably see a slow change in attitude or perhaps very little change at all.
  16. National Safety Council
  17. National Safe Workplace Institute - FATALITIES
  18. On a $2500 base penalty, that's up to $875 dollars per serious violation. Taken from http://www.lni.wa.gov/wisha/appconst/page7.htm
  19. From the perspective of the witness/victim and their families, the ramifications of WorkPlace acccidents is devastating. The loss of human life (co-workers, friends, and supervisors) can never be replaced. The emotional trauma of being involved and witnessing a serious/fatal accident cannot be described in words. After a fatality has occurred, many valuable employees may not return to work – Especially in cases of violence.
  20. . Compare $4.4 Million sanctioned against Equilon by L&I to $45M in out-of-court settlement with families of 6 deceased employees.
  21. Pneumatic nailer. Reached around board and nailed in his own direction. Nail went through the board and into his eye. Dr. Hsushi Yeh (Tacoma)
  22. 11 or more employees (one work location) shall have a designated safety committee. Fewer than 11 employees may have safety meetings. MONTHLY
  23. McGill University Office of Safety Phone Dialog.
  24. Safety controls must be designed into every aspect of an organization. Must be a company vision - a value. Goal is to invoke desired change. Intervention. Positive Reinforcement. Action.
  25. Depends on the way they function within the organisation – DOES MANAGEMENT SUPPORT! Adequate time and $. Motivation level of committee members -Dedication to being effective (not just serving time). Encouraging proactive measures from all personnel System for communicating with personnel
  26. Keeps committee focused, Identifies to employees what your intent and purpose are.
  27. Long Term - THEME (0 ACCIDENTS, 50% staff trained in CPR/1st Aid, Replace X Equipment, Short Term – Identify where accidents occur through record review, interview, investigate etc. FOCUS on problem areas
  28. Be Prepared. Keep it professional and productive.
  29. 296-24-040 “The proper actions to take in event of emergencies including the routes of exiting from areas during emergencies”. WAC 296-24-567 Employee emergency plans and fire prevention plans.
  30. Facilities with Highly hazardous chemicals and others
  31. WAC 296-27-010 through 070 Recordables - OSHA 200 Log Supplemental OSHA 101 Form or L&I Form F 242-130-000
  32. Source: Substitute less harmful substance (halogenated solvents -Citrus cleaner) Path: Use a paint-brush applicator rather than spray applications Receiver: Respirator, Gloves, Splash Goggles Source: Path: Receiver:
  33. ENGINEERING CONTROLS - engineered safeguards to: 1. protect employees 2. prevent exposure to hazards Examples: machine guards, safety controls, isolation of hazardous areas, monitoring devices ADMINISTRATIVE CONTROLS - use of procedures to 1. monitor safe practices and environments 2. identify & correct new hazards 3. Safety Committee Examples: periodic inspections, equipment operating procedures , maintenance procedures, JHA selection & assignment of personal protective equipment, TRAINING Training Controls - used to ensure employees are fully and adequately trained to safely perform all tasks to which they are assigned 1. Safety Training is mandatory 2. No employee is to attempt any task without proper training in the equipment used, required personal protective equipment, specific hazards and control & emergency procedures. periodic refresher training PROTECTIVE CLOTHING/EQUIPMENT - Used when Engineering & Administrative controls not adequate protection.
  34. The first cardinal rule of hazard control (safe design) is "hazard elimination" or "inherent safety." That is, if practical, one should control (eliminate or minimize) potential hazards by designing them out of products and facilities "on the drawing board." This is accomplished through the use of such interrelated techniques as "hazard removal, hazard substitution, and/or hazard attenuation," through the use of the principles and techniques of system and product safety engineering, system and product safety management, and human factors engineering, beginning with the concept and initial planning stages of the system design process.   The second cardinal rule of hazard control (safe design) is the minimization of system hazards through the use of add-on "safety devices" or "safety features" engineered or designed into products or facilities "on the drawing board" to prevent the exposure of product or facility users to inherent potential hazards or dangerous combinations of hazards; called "extrinsic safety." A sample of such devices would include shields or barriers that guard or enclose hazards, component interlocks, pressure relief valves, stairway handrails, and passive vehicle occupant restraint and crashworthiness systems.   Passive vs. Active Hazard Controls. A principle that applies equally to the first two cardinal rules of safe design is that of "passive vs. active" hazard control. Simply, a passive control is a control that works without requiring the continuous or periodic involvement or action of system users. An active control, in contrast, requires the system operator or user to "do something" before system use, continuously or periodically during system operation in order for the control to work and avoid injury. Passive controls are "automatic" controls, whereas active controls can be thought of as "manual" controls. Passive controls are unquestionably more effective than active controls.   The third cardinal rule of hazard control (safe design) is the control of hazards through the development of warnings and instructions; that is, through the development and effective communication of safe system use (and maintenance) methods and procedures that first warn persons of the associated system dangers that may potentially be encountered under reasonably foreseeable conditions of system use, misuse, or service, and then instruct them regarding the precise steps that must be followed to cope with or avoid such dangers.   This third approach must only be used after all reasonably feasible design and safeguarding opportunities (first and second rule applications) have been exhausted.   Further, it must be recognized that the (attempted) control of system hazards through the use of warnings and instructions, the least effective method of hazard control, requires the development of a variety of state-of-the-art communication methods and materials to assure that such warnings and instructions are received and understood by system users.   Among other things, the methods and materials used to communicate required safe use or operating methods and procedures must give adequate attention to the nature and potential severity of the hazards involved, as well as reasonably anticipated user capabilities and limitations (human factors).   Briefly stated, the cardinal rules of hazard control involve system design, the use of physical safeguards, and user training. Further, it must be thoroughly understood that no safety device equals the elimination of a hazard on the drawing board, and no safety procedure equals the use of an effective safety device. This approach has been advocated by the safety literature and successfully practiced by safety professionals for decades.
  35. Purpose is not to evaluate the worker, Purpose is to evaluate the Process, System, Job, Equipment, Procedure
  36. AVOID making the breakdown so detailed That an unnecessarily large number of steps results
  37. AVOID making the job breakdown so general that basic steps are not recorded
  38. NEW WAY TO DO JOB. Determine the work goal of the job, and then analyze the various ways of reaching this goal to see which way is safest. Consider work saving tools and equipment. CHANGE CONDITIONS. Tools, materials, equipment layout or location Study change carefully for other benefits (costs, time savings) CHANGE PROCEDURE. What should the worker do to eliminate the hazard How should it be done? Document changes in detail. REDUCE FREQUENCY. What can be done to reduce the frequency of the job?? Identify parts that cause frequent repairs - change Reduce vibration save machine parts
  39. Safety Culture. Safety must be considered as part of the process
  40. The Single Most Powerful Source of Motivation Is Employee Ownership of The Safety Process. ---Ed Blair, Professor of Safety Education, Indiana University Employees are already motivated to improve safety. Their motivation is a natural instinct; they have seen what can happen when safety is compromised and they don’t want it. --Thomas R. Krause, Ph.D., Behavioral Science Technology, Inc.®
  41. WAC 296-800-32025 Conduct a preliminary investigation to determine cause(s) of work or work-related incident or accident that causes an employee serious injury A serious injury is one that: •Requires medical treatment beyond first-aid •Usually requires treatment by a medical doctor: –Makes part of the body of the injured useless or substantially reduced in efficiency –May be permanent or temporary –May be chronic or acute –May involve loss of consciousness –May cause death WAC 296-800-32030 Document the investigation findings You must: •Document the investigation findings for reference following any formal investigation
  42. •WAC 296-800-32005 DO Not move the equipment until a representative of the Department of Labor and Industries investigates the incident and releases the equipment
  43. WAC 296-800-32010 Report the death or probable death of any employee,or the in-patient hospitalization of 2 or more employees within 8 hours If you do not learn about the incident at the time it occurs,you must report the incident within 8 hours of the time it was reported to you,your agent,or employee.
  44. WAC 296-800-32015 Assign people to assist the Department of Labor and Industries
  45. WAC 296-800-32020 Assign people to conduct the preliminary investigation If the employee representative is the business agent of the employee bargaining unit and is unavailable to participate without delaying the investigation group,you may proceed,by using one of the following: –The shop steward –An employee representative member of your safety committee –A person selected by all employees to represent them
  46. Where did the accident occur When Who was present How
  47. Investigate ALL incidents. Level of involvement should be consistent with POTENTIAL damage.
  48. Divide a Watch/Clock into 4 Sections. Each section must equal 15. YOU WILL HAVE TO LOOK AT THINGS WITH A NEW PERSPECTIVE! I know of 2 possible solutions. There may be more
  49. 1+1+1+2+1+2+3+4=15 5+10=15 9+6=15 7+8=15
  50. 1+2+3+4+5=15 6+9=15 7+8=15 1+0+1+1+12=15
  51. Depending on the nature of the injury/accident. 911 should be your first response along with alerting those in the area. 1) They need to be on the way 2) Don’t know the extent of injuries and shock always a potential. Scene safety: DO NOT enter an unsecured area. Fools rush in….multiple victims REMEMBER. #1most important person=YOU, #2=Teammates, #3Employees/Public, #4 Injured. De-energize, de-pressurize, shore, ventilate etc. When it is safe to do so, provide aid, to the extent of your training. Very valuable to: talk calmly with them, provide blankets, distract them from their wounds, reassure that help is on the way. Remember to protect yourself (bbp etc.) Ask for on-lookers to leave area, assign useful things for others to do. Be aware of shock in others involved, not just the injured. Direct medical personnel to site, contact HR, etc. Securing accident scene, not for safety but for preservation of evidence. Again, clear all non-useful persons from the area. Leave tools, lights, exhaust etc., exactly where it is (unless unsafe to do so). Take meter readings, arrange for BAC, protect open containers & sample and spilled material etc.
  52. Cameras in kits. Start with big picture, work towards finest detail Black and white can be best for close, technical detail (ie., scratches on metal, frayed wires etc.) So keep one B&W camera available too
  53. Bound notebook-use pages sequentially. Will provide evidence of when you entered information. Not a loose leaf book that pages can be added/deleted without evidence. Personal Observations. YOUR observations when first on scene. Use all senses.
  54. GET All pertinent contact information. Locate position of each witness on a master chart (include vantage) Let each witness speak freely and take notes without distracting the witness. Tape record only with consent. Use sketches and diagrams to assist witness emphasize area of direct observation and label hearsay accordingly. Record exact words used by a witness to describe each observation. Word each question carefully….do not lead or suggest, but funnel Yes….Did anything seem different to you, think of the scene with all your senses - hearing, smelling-seeing-feeling-tasting. You state the motor sounded funny, can you describe the sound for us. Is that the first time you noticed the funny sound? Do you know what the sound might indicate? NO….so did you hear any funny sounds that might indicate the there might be a short in the electric motor? Identify
  55. A fault tree analysis (FTA) is a deductive, top-down method of analyzing system design and performance. It involves specifying a top event to analyze (such as a fire), followed by identifying all of the associated elements in the system that could cause that top event to occur. Fault trees provide a convenient symbolic representation of the combination of events in the occurrence of the top event. Events and gates in fault tree analysis are represented by symbols. Fault tree analyses are generally performed graphically using a logical structure of AND and OR gates. Sometimes certain elements, or basic events, may need to occur together in order for that top event to occur. In this case, these events would be arranged under an AND gate, meaning that all of the basic events would need to occur to trigger the top event. If the basic events alone would trigger the top event, then they would be grouped under an OR gate. The entire system as well as human interactions would be analyzed when performing a fault tree analysis.
  56. ADVANTAGES: Limited verbage Identify causes Graphic communication, Miscommunications limited Linkage between basic factors easily illustrated
  57. F