Title: RC 381581 Principles of Occupational SafetyLoss Control
1RC 381/581Principles of Occupational Safety/Loss
Control
2Performance Measurement
- The measurement used determines what one pays
attention to. - Peter Drucker
3Performance Measurement
- Management needs can best be served by providing
measurements of consequence, measurements of
cause, and measurements of control. Each provide
a different type of information and serves a
separate useful purpose in the safety program.
While all three measurements are important, a
good audit system provides management (at all
levels) with timely information needed to correct
performance and produce desired results!
4Top five are measures of our failures. They are
after-the fact (reactive measures)
Fatality
Lost Work Day
Recordable Injury
Consequences
First Aid Case
Near Miss
Property Damage
BOS - Categorizing - Tracking - Trending Real
Causes
Causes
Accident Analysis
Task Observations
Organizational Rules
Meetings
PPE
Training
Purchasing Engineering
Investigations
Inspections
Task Analysis
Controls
5Measurement of Loss Control Performance
- As with any aspect of business, it is necessary
to set objectives and then objectively measure
performance against such.
6Measuring performance answers questions like
- How well are we performing in our risk control
efforts? - Are we progressing toward our objectives, if not
why not? - Are we complying with legislation?
- What are our losses (time and money)?
- How many injuries and cases of ill health have
there been?
7Means of Measuring Risk Control Performance
- Active Benchmarking
- Used to determine the performance of managements
risk control efforts before things go wrong (most
preferred) - Completion of task/hazard analysis
- Completion of employee training
- Completion of planned/routine inspections
- Use of personal protective equipment
- Results of behavioral observation sampling
8Means of Measuring Risk Control Performance
(cont.)
- Reactive Benchmarking
- Used to quantify managements risk control
efforts after things go wrong - Accident statistics/analysis
- Loss tab analysis
- Worker compensation costs
- Days away from work due to injury/illness
- Is a useful measurement as long as quality
reporting/collection methodologies are used
9Reactive Benchmarking Techniques
- OSHA Incidence Rate
- Total recordable incidents X 200,000
- Total of person-hours worked
- Recordable defined as anything requiring medical
treatment (except first aid)
10Reactive Benchmarking Techniques (cont.)
- OSHA Frequency Rate
- lost-time injuries/illnesses X 200,000
- Total of person-hours worked
- Essentially tells us how often a lost-time
injury occurred or would likely occur within our
workforce
11Reactive Benchmarking Techniques (cont.)
- OSHA Severity Rate
- work days lost X 200,000
- Total of person-hours worked
- Essentially tells us how severe the lost-time
injuries are that occur within our workforce
12Bottom Line of Performance Measurement
- When accidents occur ...
- We focus on the management system
- We dont blame the people (hourly or mgmt.)
- The success of risk control efforts are better
measured by the completion of activities (e.g.,
control measures) targeted at preventing loss - Simply measuring the presence or absence of
accidents doesnt help prevent them
13Components of an Effective Management Control
System
- Identification of required activities
- Establishment of internal standards
- Measurement of personnel against established
internal standards - Provide commendation/constructive correction
- Perform regular program monitoring/ updating as
required
14Identification of Required Activities
- System activities required to achieve desired
risk control objectives should include - Top management leadership
- Planned/routine inspections
- Task observation analysis
- Effective workstation design
- Up-to-date written job descriptions
- Organizational rules procedures
15Identification of Required Activities (cont.)
- Diligent use of personal protective equipment
- Purchasing/Engineering/Product Development
department involvement - Emergency preparedness
- Employee/management training
- Routine group meetings/correspondence
- Accident analysis w/corrective follow-up
- Health services support
16Management Control System
17Identification of Work
- Planned Inspections
- Job/Task Analysis
- Accident Investigation
- Organizational Rules
- Accident Analysis
- Personal Protective Equipment
- Purchasing and Engineering Controls
- Group Meeting
18Standards
- Establishing standards for the work performance
expected in each work activity area identified. - Safety/loss control standards tell you who does
what and when. - Without adequate standards, there can be no
meaningful measurement, evaluation or correction
of substandard performance!
19Measurement
- Measuring performance by degree of compliance
with established standards. - You cannot manage what you cannot measure.
- What get measured get done.
20Evaluation
- Evaluating performance on a timely basis and
communicating it to those accountable. - Evaluation of performance is determining to what
degree a standard or standards have been met.
21Commendation and Constructive Correction
- Commending compliance and correcting deficiencies
in performance standards. - Allows good performance to be identified with
appropriate commendation. - Enables substandard performance to be identified
and corrected.
22Benefits of Regular Program Monitoring
- Provides objective behavior performance data for
timely - feedback, comparisons, competition, correction,
reinforcement, recognition - When appropriately used, these actions result in
effective control.