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NCO a Centre of Excellence

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What report? I don't remember seeing that. ... Reports. Statistics. Decision. Laws. They all. After Rasmussen, J. Many are involved ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: NCO a Centre of Excellence


1
NCO a Centre of Excellence
2
30 minutes
  • Some about NCO
  • Ideas for the future
  • An university course on accident investigation
  • Reflections from the workshop in Karlskoga

3
NCO a government commission
  • In 2001 the Swedish Government tasked the Swedish
    Rescue Services Agency, in collaboration with
    other authorities, organisations and the private
    sector, to establish a National Centre for
    Lessons Learned from Incidents and Accidents the
    NCO.

4
The ambition of the government
  • is that the NCO should develop into an
    independent cross-sector centre of excellence
    providing access to facts, statistics and
    expertise in order to improve safety work at all
    levels

5
The vision of the NCO
  • more effective safety work through improved
    common learning from incidents, accidents,
    injuries and damage

6
The NCO will
  • be an arena for cross-sector cooperation and
    development of competence
  • provide an overview and assessment of incident
    and accident trends and safety work
  • develop beneficial feedback for lessons learned
    from incidents, accidents and safety work
  • and we do things

7
Example of booklets on statistics
  • for incidents and accidents
  • on injuries amongst the elderly in Sweden

8
Example of development of competence
  • Course on qualified accident investigation
    methodology held in
  • collaboration with the Swedish Royal Institute of
    Technology

9
Training course on Advanced accident
investigation methodology
  • Aim
  • Give a deep understanding of event investigation
    as a tool for improving safety and for safety
    management
  • Target group
  • Experienced investigators or administrators
    involved in investigations
  • To day
  • 2 courses
  • 16 organisations
  • 4 Nordic countries

10
Main themes
  • Framework for accident investigations
  • Different investigation methods ( 15)
  • Theories for accidents and control
  • Overview of sectors and comparisons (state of
    practice)
  • Future investigation strategies ( state of
    art)
  • Practical work with a number of methods
  • Evaluation of different methods
  • Accident Investigation Risk Analysis
  • Juridical aspects

11
EU/JRC, OECD, UNISDR, NCO Joint MeetingSystemic
Risks and Lessons Learnd
12
Reflections from the Workshop
  • Techniques for data mining
  • Trends and tendencies for chemical accidents
  • More user-friendly databases
  • Moving from learning to look towards looking
    to learn
  • Share information across organisations
  • Communication tools
  • To convert lessons learned to lessons
    implemented
  • Exchange of investigation methodologies
  • Shift priority from generating and gathering new
    lessons to implementation of measures from
    lessons already learned
  • Workshop on Human Factor

13
Accidents i Sweden (9 milj. inh.)
  • About 2.500 Peoples killd in accidents every year
  • About 130.000 persons needs medical care at
    hospital
  • About 900.000 persons needs non institutional
    care

14
Aspects of Differing Scales and Perspectives
Frequency


Everyday accidents

Common Unusual Rare
individual group society

15
We understand life from history
  • 97 98
  • of all accidents have happend before
  • Our opportunities

16
How often have you heard or said
  • Yes, something similar happened in - - -
  • What report? I dont remember seeing that.
  • Im sure Ive seen something like this before but
    I cant find a reference to it
  • Thanks for the information, but why didnt you
    tell us sooner?

17
It has been said that
  • disasters happen when decisions are made by
    people who cannot remember what happened last
    time
  • those who cannot remember the past are condemned
    to repeat it
  • what has happened before will happen again. What
    has been done before will be done again. There is
    nothing new in the whole world
  • every incident has been well rehearsed

18
Corporate Memory
  • To improve a corporate memory
  • is a challenge

19
Corporate Memory is not
  • A file
  • An archive
  • An expert system
  • A procedure
  • An individual

20
Corporate Memory is
  • The ability an organisation has to assess, store,
    access and utilise knowledge
  • This knowledge may be stored in file, database,
    library or an individuals memory
  • The storage may be internal or external to the
    organisation
  • It is driven and effected by people

21
Many are involved in grounding for Safety
After Rasmussen, J.
  • Barriers between
  • the Levels

and sectors
Breaking the Walls
They need feedback to understand the dynamics
and learn when, how and why they should act
22
Who need the knowledgeCourse Consequence and
Barrier Model formats
23
Aspects of Differing Scales and Perspectives
Frequency


Everyday accidents

Common Unusual Rare
individual group society

24
Risk Analyses
  • To see what others will see
  • and
  • Think what others dont think
  • (and remember what others have forgotten)
  • (My definition on Risk Analyses)

25
AcciMap / A Socio-Technical modelling format
Critical event
Direct conseq.
26
An AcciMap-exampleSystem Transport of
Dangerous Goods by road
SYSTEM LEVEL
Point in local risk analysis
Tank rupture
Oil spill to ditch
Difficult roadtopography
Vulnerableenvironm.
Trafficintensity
27
Welcome to the NCO
www.nco.srv.se nco_at_srv.se Karlskoga Sweden
28
Thank You
  • Alf Rosberg
  • alf.rosberg_at_raddningsverket.se
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