Title: Karlene Roberts, PhD
1CPMR/USRCycle 1 Phase II Progress Review
.
- Karlene Roberts, PhD
- Haas School of Business
- UC Berkeley
- Anthony Ciavarelli, Ed.D
- Naval Postgraduate School
- Human Factors Associates, Inc.
2AGENDA
- High-Reliability Organizations (HRO)
- HR0 Survey Development and Validation
- Examples of Survey Analysis Aerospace
Benchmarking - Key Accomplishments
- Problem Areas Encountered
- NASA HRO-Safety Climate Web Site
- Future Plans and Schedule
3(No Transcript)
4Columbia Accident InvestigationExcerpts from
the CAIB Report
- In the boards view, NASAs organizational
culture and structure had as much to do with the
accident as the External Tank Foam (CAIB, p.177) - The Board determined that high-reliability theory
is extremely useful in describing the culture
that should exist in the human space flight
organization (CAIB, p.181) - CAIB discusses differences between the U.S. Navy
and NASA in terms of safety culture and operation
as an HRO. CAIB concluded that NASA could
substantially benefit by following the Navys
example and best practices (New York Times, July
21, 2003)
5Other Aerospace Accidents
- Genesis vehicle slammed into Utah desert,
probably because aerospace engineers installed
four small switches backward - Climate orbiter crashed into Mars because the
aerospace contractor used English measurement
while NASA used metric - Mars polar vehicle crashed when descent rockets
shut off prematurely - Television infrared observation satellite (TIROS)
fell off its transport stand because an adapter
plate was not properly secured (procedures not
followed)
6What Are Common Root Causes?
- Poor risk perception and threat recognition
- Lack of leadership commitment to risk management
- Inadequate management oversight and control
- Inadequate or unclear risk-decision criteria
- Difficulty in reporting at-risk
decisions/behavior - Policy and incentives reward excessive risk
taking - Culture does not support desired
attitudes/behavior
7Characteristics of an HRO(just a few of many
ideas about HRO)
- Leadership commitment to safe operations (failure
conscious) - Accurate perception of risk and risk mitigating
processes (sense-making) - A culture of trust and shared values
(transmission of values-beliefs) - Risk mitigating communication processes with open
discussion of errors and corrective procedures - .
- Distributed decision making, where the buck
stops everywhere. - Operating standards, with built-in redundancies,
and continuous training - Reward and discipline to reinforce safe behavior
8Organizational Culture
- Shared Values (What is important) and Beliefs
(How things work) that interact with an
organizations structures and control systems to
produce Behavioral Norms (The way things work
around here). -
9Safety Culture Components
- Shared values about what is safe and unsafe
- Common beliefs about how to conduct safe
operations - Behavioral norms that govern risk-taking,
everyday procedures and precautions - Transmission of values, beliefs and accepted
practices to others.
10Five Element HRO-Safety Climate Model
- Process auditing - a system of on-going checks to
monitor hazardous conditions - Reward system expected social compensation or
disciplinary action to reinforce or correct
behavior - Quality assurance policies and procedures that
promote high quality performance - Risk management how the organization perceives
risk and takes corrective action - Leadership and Supervision policies,
procedures, and communication processes used to
mitigate risk
11Validation based on 10 years of US Navy
Research(Demonstrated Measurement Reliability
and Validity)
12Summary of Relationship
- Units with survey average scores one sigma less
than average, the risk of mishap increases 28 - Units with survey average scores two sigma less
than average, the risk of mishap increases 65 - Units with survey average scores three sigma less
than average, the risk of mishap increases by a
factor of two(2) - Units with survey average scores one sigma above
average, the risk of mishap decreases 22 - Units with survey average scores two sigmas
above average, the risk of mishap decreases 39
13HRO Survey Development Process
- Meet with key staff to discuss risks and
conditions of clients mission or business
operations. - Interview sample of management and operational
personnel. - Tailor baseline survey items to fit clients
business line and the local situation. - Following client approval, web-based version is
created and web site constructed. - Beta Test on a selected (small) sample. (WE ARE
HERE) - Large-scale data collection and performance
feedback on scheduled roll out.
14SAMPLE DATA FROM AEROSPACE SECTOR
- Summary Statistics for Selected Ratings
- Selected Comments on Prevailing Hazards
- Selected Comments on the Survey
15Quick Look Analysis Survey Items Items are on a
Likert Scale 1-5, running from Strongly Disagree
(1) to Strongly Agree (5)
- 21 Workers in my organization carefully assess
hazards during planning of daily work operations. - 24 My immediate supervisor can be relied upon
to keep his/her word. - 25 Our safety professionals are very
influential in promoting safety. - 27 Management puts safety at the same level of
importance as production. - 35 I am adequately trained to safely conduct
all of my job assignments.
16LM Results Selected Survey Items (2)Combined
Organizations (n 356)
1735 I am adequately trainedI am adequately
trained to safely conduct all of my job
assignments.
Low Rating Example
Average Rating (1-5 Scale)
1820 Would not hesitate to advise supervisorI
would not hesitate to advise my supervisor when I
believe that the schedule pressure might
compromise safety.
High Rating Example
Average Rating (1-5 Scale)
19Hazards Identified Typical comments
- Overworked, lack of personnel pressured to work
outside their job description - Old worn out equipment
- Poor, out of date equipment. Not enough workers
- Lack of proper tools and equipment
- Old equipment. Under staffed
- Not enough people
- Employee fatigue, operator error, failed to read
procedure - Tripping hazards, heavy materials to lift
(slippery surfaces) - Fatigue, overwork, too much overtime
- Lifting injuries
- Long hours
- Rush to deadline, last minute changes, and
improper equipment - Ignorance about procedures
- Being rushed by time
20Actions to improve safety Typical comments
- Hire more people
- Dont accept more jobs than we can handle
- More communication and understanding of command
media - Retire old equipment
- Update equipment. More people
- Slow down and take time to process proof prior to
starting work (better) planning and communication - Mini huddles, use safety checklist
- Monthly safety inspections
- Communication, communication, communication
- Talk about safety at every meeting
- Better planning and scheduling
- Slow down
- Maintain safety focus
- Closer supervision
21Further safety/mission success Typical Comments
- Need to schedule workload more evenly
- Management is dedicated toward a safe work place
- Add portable defibrillators
- We need to have more people
- Provide anonymous line of reporting for safety
- Work space is inadequate
- Follow through with promises
- Too many conflicting initiatives
- Follow procedures
- Make safety (ESH) more visible at the job location
22Improvements to survey Typical comments
- The survey is great, it will be interesting to
see how we use this tool to better ourselves - Questions asked do not extract the most effective
answers. (from the workers perspective). - Keep questions worded so that they are less
complex. - Survey was fine.
- Survey looks pretty good as is.
- Survey is too general.
- The survey was good.
- Make fewer questions.
- Add items about completing goals
- Clearly define the term supervisor
- Make it shorter.
- It was an easy survey to take.
- (some confused that the survey targeted only
Denver) - I dont believe this is really anonymous
- Survey is too long
- Numerous questions do not relate to my work area
(desk job)
23KEY ACCOMPLISHMENTS
- Research protocols (interviews and survey
construction) - Published papers and presentations (see handout)
- Graduate Student Involvement
- Related work in Aerospace and Medicine
- Scheduled Beta test and Survey roll out
24HRO Survey Demonstration NASA Web Site
OSES_PHI_screens.ppt
Copy link and paste to Browser https//65.104.11
9.152/nasa/login.html
25NEXT STEPS
- Launch HRO-Survey at Goddard Space
- Provide Diagnostic Analysis and Feedback
- Focus Intervention Strategy on Feedback
26Survey Serves as Diagnostic tool
- Points to areas where problems exist at the
individual, team and organization level - Identifies units who respond outside the norm to
particular survey items - Initial survey serves as a performance baseline
and benchmark for comparison following
intervention
27Intervention Approach
- The Six Boxes methodology, developed by
Binder-Riha Associates, is designed to improve
organization performance, effectively manage
organizational change, and to develop an HRO
culture - Based on research-based Behavior Engineering
Model, it is a plain English classification of
all factors that can influence behaviors which
ultimately produce organizational results. - Teach Six Boxes to all involved
- Common model and language
- Enables organization alignment leaders,
managers, supervisors, individual contributors - Toolbox for performance problem solving and
continuous improvement
28FUTURE PLANS AND SCHEDULE
- NASA Goddard Survey Application (July 2006)
- NASA Goddard Intervention Program (October
December 2006) - NASA Expansion of Survey and Intervention
process to other NASA organizations (2007)
29The Six Boxes Model