Title: Pearce/Robinson
1IE 486 Work Analysis Design II
Instructor Vincent Duffy, Ph.D. Associate
Professor of IE/ABE Lecture 20 Safety
Design Tues. April 10, 2007
2Safety, Accidents and Human Error
- Ch.14 in Wickens text
- Introduction to Safety and Accident Prevention
- Safety Legislation
- Factors that contribute to accidents
- Human Error Approaches to Hazard Control
- Safety Analysis for Products and Equipment
3Introduction to Safety and Accident Prevention
- Accidents are the leading cause of death of young
people (under age 44). - 47000 in motor vehicles
- 13000 from falls
- 7000 from poisoning
- In 1993, 10000 deaths in the workplace alone.
- Overexertion, impact accidents, falls
- Accidents are costly safety is an economic
issue - Workplace accidents alone are estimated to cost
48B per year.
4Safety Legislation
- It is commonly recognized that during the 1800s,
workers performed under unsafe and unhealthful
conditions. - OSHA established in 1970
- Monitors safety in the workplace, however, it is
understaffed. - NIOSH National Institute of Occupational Safety
and Health - Typically performs research that may later be
integrated into OSHA standards - These days, most change with regard to safety is
due to litigation eg. Product liability
lawsuits.
5Factors that contribute to accidents
- Task components
- Age younger have more accidents,
- Ability, experience, drugs, alcohol, gender,
stress - Alertness, fatigue, motivation, accident
proneness - Job
- Arousal, fatigue, physical and mental workload,
work-rest cycles, shifts, shift rotation, pacing,
ergonomic hazards, procedures - Equipment tools
- Controls displays, electrical, mechanical and
thermal hazards, pressure hazards, toxic
substances, explosives and other component
failures
6Factors that contribute to accidents
- Physical Environment
- Illumination, noise, vibration, temperature,
humidity, airborne pollutants, fire hazards,
radiation hazards, falls - Social/psychological environment
- Management practices, social norms, training,
incentives
7Model of causal factors in occupational injury
Fig 14.1
- Management or design error creating certain
conditions in the - Work system
- Includes employee characteristics, job
characteristics, equipment tools, physical
environment, social environment - Natural factors, hazards, operator error
- Leading to accident or injury
8Human error
- Errors of omission
- Leaving out a step
- Errors of commission
- Doing a step incorrectly or adding a step
- Slips
- Intend to step on rung of ladder, but miss
- Intend to save file, but save incorrectly and
lose it - How to reduce human error?
- One of three ways
- Selection, training, or system design
9Human error
- It is also important to identify potentials for
human error - Some techniques such as THERP
- Technique for human error prediction provide
guidelines for an analyst to - identify errors that might occur at each point in
a task analysis - Assign probabilities to each error
- Other such methods exist
- Some may suggest the psychological mechanism that
caused the error, others rely on the
skills/rules/knowledge based model - To explain behavior in relation to Rasmussens
Information processing model. - So far, none are comprehensive and they tend to
rely on the ability of the person using the
method (not very repeatable) - It is suggested that more than one method be used
10Approaches to Hazard Control
- Risk hazard severity likelihood
- Severity catastrophic, critical, marginal,
negligible - Frequency frequent, probable, occasional,
remote, improbable - Reducing hazards can be focused on
- Source, path, person, administrative controls
- Source eg. Design out
- Path eg. safeguard
- Keep worker from entering a hazardous area
- Wear protective equipment
11Table 14.3 Hazard Matrix
12Approaches to Hazard Control
- Person eg. Warning or training
- These include attempts to change the behavior
that may be hazardous - Eg. Warning dont place hands near pinchpoints
on machine. - Administrative eg. legislation
- Other examples include shift rotation, mandatory
rest breaks, sanctions for incorrect and risky
behavior - These are typically not as effective as design
out (or source solutions). - How to identify possible methods of hazard
reduction? read a lot, know/study how people
will use the product.
13Safety Analysis for Products and Equipment
- Three alternatives
- 1. Designers can consider safety during initial
design - Identifying potential hazards of a product, tool
or piece of equipment when it is first designed. - 2. Facilities or systems can be evaluated
proactively to identify hazards to control them
before accidents occur. - 3. Facilities and systems can be evaluated in a
reactive manner by evaluating actual accidents
to fix the hazards that caused them.
14Safety Analysis for Products and Equipment
- One such method suggests
- Breaking the system or product into
sub-components - Then analyzing the sub-components or sub
assemblies for potential failure - And then evaluating potential effects of each
failure - This the failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA)
- This is sort of bottom-up approach
- A top-down approach could be the fault-tree
analysis - From incident or undesirable event to possible
causes
15Bottom up - Considering each failure analyzing
what can lead to it
- Failure Mode, Effects Criticality Analysis
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18QOTD
- 1. FMECA is a a. bottom up approach to safety
analysisb. top down approach c. top down to
analysis of work designs that use automationd.
all of the abovee. none of the above