Title: ACCIDENT PREVENTION
1Photo Tulalip Bay by Diane L. Wilson-Simon
2ACCIDENT 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)
3Introduction Course Overview
4PROaction versus REaction
- Well thats an accident waiting to happen
- Someone ought to do something
- That someone is YOU!
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7What Is An Accident?
"9 1 1"
"EVACUATE"
CRASH
F I R E
! _at_ !
Call an Ambulance
8What Is An Accident?
"That Was Close"
"Just Missed !"
"Whhoooaaa!"
! _at_ !
Near Miss
"Watch Out"
Almost Hit
L U C K Y
9An 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
10Hazard
- Existing or Potential Condition That Alone or
Interacting With Other Factors Can Cause Harm - A Spill on the Floor
- Broken Equipment
11Risk
- 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
Risk ? 0
12Safety
- FREEDOM FROM DANGER OR HARM
Nothing is Free of
- BUT - We can almost always make something SAFER
13Safety Is Better Defined As.
-
- A Judgement of the
- Acceptability of Risk
14RATIOS
15OSHA METHOD330 Incidents29 Minor Injuries1
Major or Loss-Time Accident
16Candy Jar Example
17Types 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
18Types 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
19Fatal 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
20Fatal 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)
21Accident 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
Basic Causes
Unsafe Conditions
Indirect Causes
Unsafe Acts
Slip/Trip Fall Energy Release Pinched Between
Direct Causes
ACCIDENT Personal Injury Property
Damage Potential/Actual
23Basic Causes
- Management
- Environment
- Equipment
- Human Behavior
- Systems Procedures
- Natural Man-made
- Design Equipment
24Management
- Systems Procedures
- Lack of systems procedures
- Availability
- Lack of Supervision
25Environment
- Physical
- Lighting
- Temperature
- Chemical
- vapors
- smoke
- Biological
- Bacteria
- Reptiles
26Environment
27Design and Equipment
- Design
- Workplace layout
- Design of tools
- equipment
- Maintenance
28Design and Equipment
- Equipment
- Suitability
- Stability
- Guarding
- Ergonomic
- Accessibility
29Human Behavior
Not limited to person involved in accident
30Human Factors
- Omissions Commissions
- Deviations from SOP
- Lacking Authority
- Short Cuts
- Remove guards
31Human Behavior is a function of
Activators (what needs to be done)
Competencies (how it needs to be done)
Consequences (what happens if it is/isnt done)
32ABC Model
- Antecedents
- (trigger behavior)
- Behavior
- (human performance)
- Consequences
- (either reinforce or punish behavior)
33Only 4 Types of Consequences
- Positive Reinforcement (R)
- ("Do this you'll be rewarded")
-
- Negative Reinforcement (R-)
- ("Do this or else you'll be penalized")
Behavior
- Punishment (P)
- ("If you do this, you'll be penalized")
- Extinction (E)
- ("Ignore it and it'll go away")
34Consequences Influence Behaviors Based Upon
Individual Perceptions of
positive or negative
Magnitude
Impact
- Timing - immediate or future
- Consistency - certain or uncertain
35Human Behavior
- Behaviors that have consequences that are
- Soon
- Certain
- Positive
- Have a stronger effect on peoples behavior
36Some examples of Consequences
37Why is one sign often ignored, the other one
often followed?
38Human 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
39Human 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
40Human Behavior
- Positive
- A positive consequence influences behavior more
powerfully than a negative consequence - Penalties and Punishment dont work
- Speeding Ticket Analogy
41Human 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)
42Deviations from SOP
- No Safe Procedure
- Employee Didnt know Safe Procedure
- Employee knew, did not follow Safe Procedure
- Procedure encouraged risk-taking
- Employee changed approved procedure
43Human 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?
44Human 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
45Human 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
46Human Behavior
- Some experts believe you can change workers
safety behavior by changing their Attitude - Accident Report Safety Attitude
- A persons 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
47Are inside a persons head -therefore they are
not observable nor measurableAttitudes can be
changed by changing behaviors
Attitudes
however
48Human Behavior
- Attention Behavioral Safety approach
- Focuses on getting workers to pay Attention
- Inability to control Attention is a
contributing factor in many injuries - You cant scare workers into a safety focus with
Pay Attention campaigns
49Reasons 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
50Reasons 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
51Human 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
52Human Behavior
- Developing Personal Safety Awareness
- Before starting, consider how to do job safely
- Understand required P.P.E. and how to use it
- Determine correct tools and ensure they are in
good condition - Scan work area know what is going on
- As you work, check work position reduce any
strain - Any unsafe act or condition should be corrected
- Remain aware of any changes in your workplace
people coming, going, etc. - Talk to other workers about safety
- Take safety home with you
53Human Behavior
- Some Thought Questions
- Do you want to work safely?
- Do you want others to work safely?
- Do you want to learn how to prevent
accidents/injuries? - How often do you think about safety as you work?
- How often do you look for actions that could
cause or prevent injuries?
54Human Behavior
- More Thought Questions
- Have you ever carried wood without wearing
gloves? - Have you ever left something in a walkway that
was a tripping hazard? - Have you ever carried a stack of boxes that
blocked your view? - Have you ever used a tool /equipment you didnt
know how to operate? - Have you ever left a desk or file drawer open
while you worked in an area? - Have you ever placed something on a stair Just
for a minute? - Have you ever done anything unsafe because Ive
always done it this way?
55Human Behavior
- TIME!
- All this safety stuff takes time doesnt it?
- Im too busy!
- I cant possibly do all this!
- The boss wants the job done now!
56Human 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!!
57Safety 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 - Govt. 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
58OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS
- NEGATIVE OUTCOMES
- POSITIVE OUTCOMES
59 Direct Costs
- Medical
- Insurance
- Lost Time
- Fines
60Compliance
- 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
61Compliance
- 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
62Indirect Costs
- Injured, Lost Time Wages
- Non-Injured, Lost Time Wages
- Overtime
- Supervisor Wages
- Lost Bonuses
- Employee Morale
- Need For Counseling
- Turn-over
63Indirect 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
64REAL Costs
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66OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS
- POSITIVE ASPECTS
- Accident investigation
- Prevent repeat of accident
- Improved safety programs
- Improved procedures
- Improved equipment design
67Accident Prevention Program
- Must Be
- Written
- Tailored to particular hazards for a particular
plant or operation - Minimum Elements
- Safety Orientation Program
- Safety and Health Committee
68Accident 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
69Accident 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
70Accident 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
71Safety Meeting
- You Must
- Review inspection reports
- Evaluate accident investigations
- Evaluate APP and discuss recommendations
- Document attendance and topics
72Safety Committees
73Safety Committees
Proactive Safety
- 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
74Safety 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
75Four points to Remember
- Communication Must be a loop system
- Dedication From everyone
- Partnership Between Management
- and Employees
- Participation An important part of
- team working.
76How effective can a Committee be?
77Safety CommitteePolicy Statement
A written and publicized statement is an
effective means of providing guidance and
demonstrating commitment
78Safety Committee Focus
- Long Term Goals
- Objectives to Achieve
- Time Frame
- Short Term Goals
- Assignments between Meetings
- Work toward achieving Long-Term Plan
79Planning the Safety Meeting
- Select topics
- Set post the agenda
- Schedule safety meeting
- Prepare meeting site
- Encourage participation
80Conducting 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
81Components 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
82Regular 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
83Emergency Plan
- Anticipate What Could Go Wrong and Plan for those
Situations - Drill for Emergency Situations
84Emergency 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
85Record 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
86Record 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
87Immediately 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
88HAZARD ANALYSIS
89Hazard 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
90Step 1 Identify Hazards
- HAZARD condition with the potential to
cause personal injury, death and property damage
91Hazard Identification
- Review Records
- Talk to Personnel
- Accident Investigations
- Follow Process Flow
- Write a Job Safety Analysis
- Use Inspection Checklists
92STEP 2 Assess Hazards
- Probability - How likely is the hazard?
- Likely
- Not likely
- Severity - What will happen if encountered?
- Death
- Serious Injury
- Damage to property
93Levels of Risk Awareness
- Unaware Doesnt 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
94Who is at Risk?
- Contractors
- Janitorial
- Maintenance
- Others
- Members of Public
- Passers-by
- Neighbors
- Workers
- Visitors
- Invited
- Customers
- Emergency services
- Delivery drivers
- Uninvited
- Trespassers
- Burglars
95STEP 3 Make Risk Decisions
What can we do to reduce the risk? Does the
benefit outweigh the risk?
96STEP 4 Implement Controls
- Substitution
- Engineering controls
- Administrative Controls
- Personal Protective Equipment
97Hazard Controls
98Hazard Control
- Administrative Engineering
- Protective Equipment/Clothing
99Engineering
- Hazard Elimination
- Add-On Safety Design
- Active vs. Passive
- User Instructions (Manual)
Ventilation Design/Layout Safety Devices
100Administrative
- Safety Rules
- Disciplinary Policy - Accountability
- Preventative Maintenance
- Training
- Proficiency/Knowledge Demonstrations
101Step 5 Supervise
- Ensure risk control measures are implemented
- Track progress
- Feedback
102JOB SAFETY ANALYSIS
103Job 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
104Job Safety Analysis
105Job Safety Analysis Priorities
- New Jobs
- Potential of Severe Injuries
- History of Disabling Injuries
- Frequency of Accidents
106Observation 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!)
107Identify Hazards Potential Accidents
- Search for Hazards
- Produced by Work
- Produced by Environment
- Repeat job observation as many times as necessary
to identify all hazards
108Key Steps TOO MUCHChanging 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
109Key Steps NOT ENOUGHChanging a Flat Tire
- Park car
- Take off flat tire
- Put on spare tire
- Drive away
110Key Job Steps JUST RIGHTChanging 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
111Job Safety Analysis
- Steps
- Park set brake
- Remove Spare Jack
- Loosen lugs
112Job Safety Analysis
- Steps
- Park set brake
- Remove Spare Jack
- Loosen lugs
- Hazards
- Hit by traffic
- Back Strain
- Foot/Toe impact
- Shoulder strain
113Job Safety Analysis
- Steps
- Park set brake
- Remove Spare Jack
- Loosen lugs
- Hazards
- Hit by traffic
- Back Strain
- Foot/Toe impact
- Shoulder strain
- 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
114Develop Solutions
- Fix-A-Flat
-
- No off-road driving
- Buy self-sealing tires
- Maintenance / Change-out program
- Find a new way to do job
- Change physical conditions that create hazards
- Change the work procedure
- Reduce frequency
115JSA EXERCISE
116INSPECTIONS
117Inspections
- Fact-Finding vs. Fault Finding
- Sound knowledge of the plant
- Knowledge of relevant standards codes
- Systematic inspection steps
- Method of evaluating data
118Inspection Limitations
- Blinder affect
- Rote inspections
- All Check - No action
- Who is inspecting?
119Outcomes
- Improve Safety
- New Way to Do Job
- Change Physical Conditions
- Change Work Procedures
- Reduce Frequency of Dangerous Job
120New 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
121Change in Physical Conditions
- Tools, materials, equipment layout or location
- Study change carefully for other benefits (costs,
time savings)
122Change in Work Procedures
- What should the worker do to eliminate the
hazard? - How should it be done?
- Document changes in detail
123Reduce 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
124Performing Safety Audits
125Guide for Personal Audits
- The guide has five steps
- Audit
- React
- Communicate
- Follow up
- Raise standards
126Audit
- 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
127React
- 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 - Acceptable because...
- Not acceptable because...
- Deteriorated because...
- Improved because
128Communicate
- 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
129Follow Up
- Critical for success of the safety program
- Allows you to demonstrate that it is important
- Must communicate your assessment to the employees
130Raise 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
131Key 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
132Observation 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
133Observation Techniques
- Remember ABBI -- look Above, Below, Behind,
Inside - Develop a questioning attitude
- Use all senses
- sight
- hearing
- smell
- touch
134Inspections and Field Observations
- Use a checklist
- Ask questions
- Take notes
- Respect lines of communication
- Draw conclusions
135Unsafe 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
136Unsafe 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
137Audit 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
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139Management Commitment
- Should Management Consider Safety as a Priority
in Conducting Business
??
140Management Commitment
141PRIORITIES CHANGE
142Employee Participation
- Accident Prevention Plan Development
- Safety Committee
- Safety Bulletin Board
- Crew-Leader Meetings
- Day-to-Day Knowledge comes from where the work
is actually done and hazards actually exist.
143SHARED VISION EXERCISE
144AVAILABLE RESOURCES
- OSHA Website www.osha.gov
- Washington State Labor Industries Website
www.lni.wa.gov
145ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION
146INTRODUCTION
- 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
147THE ACCIDENT
148THE ACCIDENT
- An
- unplanned and unwelcome event
- that interrupts normal activity
149Accidents are What Happens to Somebody Else
- BUT REMEMBER
- YOU
- are somebody else
- to somebody else
150THE ACCIDENT
- MINOR ACCIDENTS
- Such as paper cuts to fingers or dropping a box
of materials
151THE ACCIDENT
- MORE SERIOUS ACCIDENTS
- Such as a forklift dropping a load or someone
falling off a ladder
152THE ACCIDENT
- Accidents that occur over an extended time frame
- Such as hearing loss or an illness resulting from
exposure to chemicals
153THE ACCIDENTNEAR-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!
154THE ACCIDENT
-
- ACCIDENTS HAVE TWO THINGS IN COMMON
155THE ACCIDENT
- They all have outcomes from the accident
156THE ACCIDENT
- They all have contributory factors that cause
the accident
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158OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS
- NEGATIVE Results
- Injury possible death
- Disease
- Damage to equipment property
- Litigation costs, possible citations
- Lost productivity
- Morale
159OUTCOMES OF ACCIDENTS
- POSITIVE Results
- Accident investigation
- Prevent repeat of accident
- Change to safety programs
- Change to procedures
- Change to equipment design
160ACCIDENT 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
161Direct 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
162Indirect 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
You Must
- Conduct a preliminary investigation for
- serious injuries with immediate symptoms
- Document the investigation findings
164ACCIDENT 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
165ACCIDENT 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)
166ACCIDENT 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
167ACCIDENT 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
168ACCIDENT 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 incident?
169ACCIDENT 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
170Why Not Rely On OSHA Police To Investigate?
- Focus On Culpability
- Minor Accidents Not Investigated
- PREVENTION
- Protect Company Interests
- OSHA Requirements
171Investigating Accidents
- How to find out what really happened
172Why Investigate Accidents?
- Find the cause
- Prevent similar accidents
- Protect company interests
173At which level do we investigate?
174Investigation Strategy
- Need For Investigation
- Control the Scene
- Gather Facts
- Analyze Data
- Establish Causes
- Write Report
- Take Corrective Action
175Investigative 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
176The 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?
177The Aim of the InvestigationIS NOT TO
- Exonerate individuals or management
- Satisfy insurance requirements
- Defend a position for legal argument
- Or, to assign blame
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181COMPANY ACCIDENT FORMS
- Must be filled out completely by the employee
and employees immediate supervisor (this
includes foremen) - Must be turned in to Safety within 24 hours of
incident
182BENEFITS 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
183BENEFITS 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!
184Who 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
185Immediate 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
186Isolate 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
187Provide Care to the Injured
- Ensure that medical care is provided to the
injured people before proceeding with the
investigation
188Secure the Scene for Safety
- Eliminate the hazards
- Control chemicals
- De-energize
- De-pressurize
- Light it up
- Shore it up
- Ventilate
189Fact Finding
- Gather evidence from many sources during an
investigation - Get information from witnesses and reports as
well as by observation - Dont try to analyze data as evidence is gathered
190Gather 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
191Gather 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)
192Gather 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
193Photographs
- Unbiased Recording
- Keep Log of Photos
- Overall to Close-up
- Color if possible
- Supplement with Video
194Gather Data
- Data includes
- Persons involved
- Date, time, location
- Activities at time of accident
- Equipment involved
- List of witnesses
195Review 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?
196Documents
- Collect All Related Documents
- Inspection Logs
- Policy Procedures Manual
- JSA (Job Safety Analysis)
- Equipment Operations Manuals
- Insurance Records
- Employee Records
- Police Reports
197Those who do not know the past are destined to
- Repeat
- Repeat
- Repeat
- Repeat
- Repeat
- Repeat
- It.
198ISOLATE 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
199NORMS 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 dont agree on
what they observed. - Non-Measurable - A number isnt used.
- General - Based on non-detailed descriptions.
200INVESTIGATION TRAPS
- Put your emotions aside!
- Dont 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
201Record Evidence
- Keep All Notes in Bound Notebook
- Include Date - Time - Place Vantage Point
- Keep Originals
- Rewrite in Report Form
202Samples
- Collect Perishables First
- Fluids
- Open Containers
- Filings
- Chemicals
- Air
203Interviews
- 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
204Interviews
- 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
205Interviews
- Excellent Source of first hand knowledge
- May Present Pitfalls in form of
- Bias
- Perspective
- Embellishment
- Omissions
206Ask 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
207Interview 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
208The 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
209The 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
210The 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?
211The Interview
- Dont 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
212The 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
213The 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
214Ask 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?
215Ask 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?
216Witness Interviews
- DO
- Separate Witnesses
- Written Statements
- Open ended questions
- Provide Diagrams
- Encourage Details
- Show Concern
- Record w/permission
- DONT
- Suggest Answers
- Interrogate
- Focus on Blame
- Dismiss Details
- Bar Emotions
- Make Judgments
217Analysis of Accident Causes
- Immediate Causes
- What was done?
- What was not done?
- What hazardous condition existed?
- Root Causes
- Why did they do this?
- Why didnt they do that?
- Why did the unsafe condition exist?
- Why wasnt it corrected?
218Analyze 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
219CONTRIBUTING 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?
220DETERMINE 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
221Indirect Causes
- Unsafe conditions what material conditions,
environmental conditions and equipment conditions
contributed to the accident - Unsafe Acts what activities contributed to the
accident
222Breakdown of Unsafe Conditions
- Inadequately guarded or unguarded equipment
- Defective tools, equipment or materials
- Fire and explosion hazard
- Unexpected movement hazard
- Projection hazards
223Breakdown of Unsafe Conditions
- Housekeeping
- Hazardous environmental conditions
- Improper ventilation
- Improper illumination
- Unsafe dress or apparel
224Breakdown 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
225Basic Causes
- Management
- Environment
- Equipment
- Human Behavior
- Systems Procedures
- Design Equipment
226Management
- 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?
227FIND ROOT CAUSES
- When you have determined the contributing
factors, dig deeper! - If employee error, what caused that behavior?
- If defective machine, why wasnt it fixed?
- If poor lighting, why not corrected?
- If no training, why not?
228Contribution 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.
229What controls failed?
- List the specific engineering, administrative
and training controls that failed and how these
failures contributed to the accident
230What controls worked?
- List any controls that prevented a more serious
accident or minimized collateral damage or
injuries