Title: Ole Carstensen
1The Prevention of Occupational Injuries in 2
industrial plants using an Incident Reporting
Scheme
- Ole Carstensen
- Kent Jacob Nielsen
- Kurt Rasmussen
Working on Safety 3rd international Conference
2Background
- Accident or incident analysis is used in
proactive accident prevention models based on
different theories of accident causation - Ex. Safety iceberg assumption
3Objectives
- To introduce an in-depth analysis tool for
accidents and near-misses in 2 industrial plants - To investigate whether a higher degree of
registration and in-depth analysis of minor
accidents (MI) and near-misses (NS) will have a
preventive effect on the total number of lost
time injuries (LTI) in the plants during a 2-year
period. - To investigate promoting and inhibiting factors
for using an in-depth analysis and registration
system in the companies
4Time Schedule
Post-intervention measurement
Intervention
Pre-intervention measurment
1/1-02
1/7-01
1/7-04
1/1-04
1/7-03
1/1-03
1/7-02
T0
T2
5Intervention
- New registration system
- Registration of Minor accidents and near-misses
- Analyses of the accidents and incidents to
discover problem areas and taking preventive
measures.
6Effect measurement
- Analysis of accident data from 1 year before
study start to 2 years after study start. - Questionnaire at baseline and 2 years later
- Safety climate,
- Managements commitment to safety
- Interviews (with employees) at baseline and 2
years later - Safety practices
- Accident registration
- Occupational accidents
- Safety attitudes
7Material and method
57 of the employees answered the questionnaire
twice
8(No Transcript)
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10Results Injury rates
Significant increase plt0,01 in plant A (T0 to T2)
11Results Injury rates
Significant increase plt0,01 in plant A (T0 to T2)
12Results Injury rates
Significant decrease plt0,01 in plant A (T0 to T2)
13Results Questionnaire dataSafety Climate
0-68 (highest best)
Only significant difference plt0,01 in plant B (T0
to T2)
14Results Questionnaire dataManagements
commitment to safety
1-5 (highest best)
Only significant difference plt0,01 in plant B (T0
to T2)
15Results Questionnaire dataWillingnes to report
Incidents
16Results Interviews
- Plant A
- More focus on safety issues
- Increased knowledge on safety
- Changes in attitudes
- More management commitment to safety
- No changes in employees understanding of
proactive accident prevention and use of analysis
of MI and NS.
- Plant B
- Same focus on safety issues as before
- Same knowledge on safety as before
- No changes in attitudes
- Same management commitment to safety
- No changes in employees understanding of
proactive accident prevention and use of analysis
of MI and NS.
17Conclusion
- It is possible to pursue a preventive strategy
based on registration and in-dept analysis of
occupational accidents and near-misses - A successful implementation of an incident
reporting scheme (increase in the reporting of
NMs and MIs, identifying accident patterns
found in the NM and MI-data), was followed by a
decline in the incidence of LTIs at a Danish
metal plant.
18Conclusion
- Key factors in successful implementation
- Top management commitment.
- Willingness to report accidents.
- Effects
- Increased focus on safety
- Improved safety climate scores
- Increased workers perception of management
involvement in safety