Title: Hidden Faultlines In Your Organization
1Hidden Faultlines In Your Organization
- Find them FAST FIX them Forever
- Dr. Ted Spickler
- Quality and Business Services
- 412-777-2054 ted.spickler.b_at_bayer.com
- ? Bayer Corporate and Business Services LLC
2Why Are We Here?
- Organizations, like geological features, are
subject to earthquakes - sudden upheavals that
can later be attributed to hidden, underground
faultlines that are sensitive to stresses and
can, without warning, let lose with disastrous
consequences.
3Faultlines
- Some of us have chronic problems that have defied
previous attempts at resolution. - Old problems rear up out of the blackness and
bite us again and again. - Meaning we never really fixed them the first
time.
4What Are We Going to Do Today?
- Examine techniques for uncovering faultlines.
- Practice building logic trees, a key tool for
uncovering Latent Causes. - Differentiate between Direct Causes, Symptoms,
Contributing Causes, and Latent Causes. - Learn to build effective fixes to these problems.
5When Something Goes Wrong Typical reaction
- Shoot the messenger.
- Jump to quick conclusions about why something
happened. - Find someone to blame - THEN Hang em high!
- Review procedures with bad person.
- Re-train and discipline bad person.
- How about blame the supplier!
- Better yet Blame the CUSTOMER!
- Hope it doesnt happen again.
6We Need A Better Approach
- Find out what really went wrong.
- How do the quakes happen?
- What can we do to prevent bad things like this
from happening again? - Where do you find evidence for the hidden
faultlines? - Utilize a systematic approach using tools that
avoid simple blaming. - Develop practical solutions that fix it forever.
7Finding the Faultlines
- We have learned to look in these two places
- Customer Complaints
- ISO audit Corrective Action Requests (CARS)
8COMPLAINTS
- Individual complaints are like viewing the
company using tunnel vision. - You can get trapped in the specific details of
any one case. - Instead look at a broad range of similar
complaints looking for patterns. - These patterns appear to be families of
complaints. - The underlying causes of these patterns are what
we are looking for. - Doing this is easier if you have a comprehensive
customer complaint database.
9ISO Corrective Action Requests
- In a similar manner look into the requests for
corrective action that are written as a result of
internal ISO audits. - Are there relationships between complaints and
CARS? - As with complaints, you need a database of CARS.
10Steps in searching for that hidden FaultLine
- Work backwards from the visible symptom of a
hidden faultline. - The visible symptom is evidence that you have a
problem. - The kind of problem we are interested in shows up
multiple times and sometimes in varying places
with often a variety of symptoms. - You dont know this at first because you start
with visible symptoms. - Sometimes this backwards analysis uncovers just a
local issue that hardly counts as a faultline. - In that case you find the cause of the problem
and fix it.
11Variety of Problem-Solving Tools
- Fishbone Diagram (Cause and Effect).
- The Five Whys.
- Systematic Root Cause Diagramming Methods
- Commercial systems (see bibliography)
- Computer programs and chart-based analyses.
- Chronological timeline
- Logic Tree
- Whats Different Analysis, also known as
IS/IS-NOT - (Kepner Tragoe)
- Be prepared to apply multiple tools as the
circumstances dictate
12Two Models for Uncovering Faultlines
- Single Investigator
- Has a virtual team lurking in the background.
- Can use all the tools described later.
- BUT might be biased or jump too quickly to
conclusions. - AND might miss something hidden under the
surface. - May fail to come up with a good mix of corrective
actions. - Team with Facilitator
- Expensive to get everyone together.
- Used when a highly visible problem really needs
big-time attention. - Used when many departments touch the problem.
13If You Need a Team ...
- Include people who know something about what
happened. - But hold down the size of the team! 5 - 7 seems
optimal - Want persons with different expertise and
backgrounds. May want a vendor or a customer
representative on the team if appropriate. - Some team members might feel guilty!
- The guilty-feeling persons should not be
spotlighted - we need information and not
remorse. - Hold kick-off meeting - carefully define the
problem. - Determine what sorts of information are likely to
be needed.
14Gather Information
- Interviews, copies of procedures, copies of logs,
charts, test results, reports, photographs,
maintenance records, audit reports, process flow
charts and diagrams. - Has this happened before? Retrieve reports from
earlier investigations. - This is why archiving investigations in databases
is useful! - Do not assume anything - fill in the details with
facts. - Expect the unexpected - look for the surprise!
15A Lesson In Assuming
Bill owns a company that manufactures and
installs car-wash systems. Bill's company
installed a car-wash system in Frederick, MD.
These are complete systems, that include not only
the car wash itself, but also the money-changing
machines.
16A Lesson In Assuming
Lots of money turned up missing - was it the
manager? Or had someone stolen the key from the
manager to make a copy? Bill just couldn't
believe that his people would do that, so they
set up a camera to catch the thief in action.
Well, they caught him on film!
17It was not just one bird there were several
working together. Once they identified the
thieves, they found over 4000 in quarters on the
roof of the car wash and more under a nearby tree.
18(No Transcript)
19A Lesson In Assuming
No matter what the circumstantial evidence may
be, dont jump to conclusions until you have all
the facts. In this case, the new owner made the
assumption that sincea) Money was missing on a
regular basis.b) The machines were not being
broke into (no damage).c) The only other keys
would be the dealer or one of the dealers
employees. that it must be theft by the dealer
or a stolen key. WRONG!!
20Key Tool for Identification of Hidden Faultlines
21How to Construct a Logic Tree
- For training purposes we will play around with a
trivially simple case - First define the PROBLEM by examining symptoms
- We lost 20 hours of production
- The customers plant had to be shut down
- An employee broke his leg
- My son was ticketed for speeding
- Search for the pain, where does it hurt?
- The problem has a so what dimension, check why
do we care? - The cost of a ticket is an OUCH!
- The possible increase in insurance premiums
HURTS! - Your son has run afoul of the LAW not a good
thing.
22Construct the Sequence of Events and Conditions
- Begin with the bad thing.
- Ask How did that bad thing happen? or What
immediately preceded the problem event to
directly cause it to happen? - EXAMPLE
- My son was driving his car AND His speed was
35 AND The speed limit was 25 AND A Police
Officer observed him. - Think in terms of events and all of the
necessary conditions that conspired to cause
something bad to happen. In this example, the
two events and two conditions had to all be
present to lead to the end result.
23Speeding Logic Tree
Each box contains a single item. Avoid
statements like Driving his car at 35.
24Building The Logic Tree
- The structure looks like a sideways tree.
- It spreads out with multiple limbs.
- Develop each limb of the tree by asking What
caused this to happen?. - Capture events and conditions necessary to
describe what happened - working backwards. - If you dont know the why, terminate that
branch with a ? mark. You may need to research
that limb further. - Eventually each branch ends.
- Judgment is required here. Dont terminate a
branch prematurely (you may miss a significant
organizational fault, but on the other hand dont
keep going back forever to the origin of time.
25What the Logic Tree Looks Like
26Speeding Logic Tree
?
Need to investigate why he was Not aware that
speed limit was 25
27Speeding Logic Tree
The root cause here might be attributed to
Inattention. BUT why the Inattention?
28Try a Simple Example
- Take these eight statements and identify the
symptom of the problem - then draw the events and
conditions in a Logic Tree Chart.
29Eight Statements
- Did not see debris
- Driving to work
- Left by previous car?
- Got a flat tire
- Looking backward to pass car
- Debris shredded tire
- Slow car in front
- Debris in road
30Case of the Shredded Tire
Case of the Shredded Tire
31After The Logic Tree is Constructed ...
- Identify Direct Causes.
- Key events or conditions (e.g., ran over
debris) that led directly to the undesirable
event. - Appear to the untrained person as the root
cause but is not. - Identify Contributing Factors.
- They have an influence on the problem, but if
they were not present, the event could still have
occurred. - Example Talking on the cell phone
32Now Look Deeper
- Identify Latent Causes.
- Affect not only this incident but influence
spreads over a wide area and could generate many
other similar incidents. - The process of checking for access to the passing
lane
33Definition of Latent
- Present but not visible or Active
- Dormant
- Quiescent
34Searching for Latent Causes
- One reason for identifying Direct Causes and
Contributing Factors is to avoid calling them
Latent Causes. - Direct Causes and Contributing Factors affect
this particular case. - Fixing these factors is sometimes called
Containment. - Latent Causes will generate new problems of a
similar nature at a later date. - Addressing Latent Causes leads to sustaining
corrective actions.
35Finding a Latent Cause
- In the speeding example, Speed was 35 is a
Direct Cause to Ticketed for speeding, but not
the latent cause. - Latent Causes underlie Direct Causes.
- Latent Causes are at the end of the
cause-and-effect chain yet still within the
control of the organization. - Although the Direct Causes lead directly to the
problem, the Latent Cause sets up circumstances
to bring about the Direct Causes.
36Test for statements identifying latent causes
- If a statement merely summarizes a bit of factual
information about something that took place it is
not a good latent cause statement. - Example Pipe broke
- This is an accurate statement describing what
happened. BUT the statement does not drill deep
enough beyond describing what happened, hence it
is not identfying a latent cause.
37Latent Cause Tests
- Events are not typically latent causes. Latent
causes are more likely conditions that allowed
events to lead to the (usually) undesired effect
. - Think in terms of inadequate systems, processes,
and procedures.
38Other Tests for a Latent Cause Statement
- If you were to remove the latent cause, or fix
it, or change it so that the influence it had
before is gone...the problem should go away
permanently. - Sometimes it might take fixing or removing more
than one thing, in that case you have more than
one latent cause. - One of the causes is necessary but not
sufficient. - This shows up as fixing the problem under certain
circumstances but not all circumstances.
39WARNING Symptoms are not latent causes.
- Symptoms partially describe the problem.
- Symptoms tell you something about whats wrong.
- BUT Fixing the symptom rarely stops the problem
from happening again. - We are having processing problems at the
customer site, and their filters are showing
evidence of a solid contaminant in our product.
- The solid contaminant is a only a symptom of the
underlying cause. - Ineffective corrective action They should
switch to larger filters.
40Corrective Actions
- After the Logic Tree chart is completed
- Check each box and ask if there is anything that
can be done about it. - Build a corrective action list from these ideas.
- Corrective Actions should
- Be practical and achievable.
- Reduce the likelihood of problem repetition.
- Be compatible with other departments or
functions. - Be accountable in terms of persons and time.
- Be sure you have done something about the Latent
Causes and the various contributing factors.
41EXAMPLE
- The Case of Something That went Wrong?
42Examples of Actual Investigations
43EXAMPLE
- For the want of a nail, the shoe was lost for
the want of a shoe the horse was lost and for
the want of a horse the rider was lost, being
overtaken and slain by the enemy, all for the
want of care about a horse-shoe nail. Benjamin
Franklin, Poor Richards Almanac
44EXAMPLE OF AN INEFFECTIVE LATENT-CAUSE ANALYSIS
- Complaint Five skids are misidentified. Labels
exhibit code 160200 instead of 160280. - Latent Cause The latent cause of this error is
that the label was not generated with the correct
code - IS THIS CORRECT?
45ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF AN INEFFECTIVE LATENT-CAUSE
ANALYSIS
- Customer profiles define shipping requirements.
If the shipment arrived at the wrong temperature,
it is because the temperature was not in the
customer profile. - HAVE WE FOUND THE LATENT CAUSE?
46The Case of the Missing Bar-Code Label
- Complaint Description Section
- Missing bar code labels - customer requires
bar-code labels on every box showing the part
number. - Investigation Section
- All messages are in place for customer to
receive bar-code labels on their shipments.
Order Entry tested a dummy order to make sure
everything was in place for them to receive them
on the next order and the test ran perfectly. We
can only conclude this was a system-related
problem that should not occur again. - WAS THIS AN EFFECTIVE INVESTIGATION?
47A Less than Effective Latent Cause and Corrective
Action
- Latent Cause Section
- Isolated incident that may have been a
system-related problem. All procedures are in
place for customer to get bar-code labels. Test
confirmed this. - IS THIS A LATENT CAUSE?
- Corrective Action Section
- Make sure before printing a bill of lading that
bar-code indicator is set to N in other words
do not bypass bar code labeling. This has been
noted on customer profile. - IS THIS AN EFFECTIVE CORRECTIVE ACTION?
48The Case of the Scrambled Boxes
- Complaint Description
- Customer received sample with two different
labels on one box. One label read 248-1050 and
the other label read 348-012002. The material
ordered was 248-1050. - Investigation
- There were two orders from the customer
scheduled to ship. One order was for 100 pounds
of 348-012002 and the other for 100 pounds of
248-1050. As the technician was processing the
samples the shipping labels were attached to the
wrong boxes. In essence it is inattention on the
part of the technician which resulted in these
orders being labeled inappropriately.
49Next Step..
- Latent Cause Analysis
- The latent cause was human error, affixing
address labels on two orders incorrectly. - This is also a procedure short coming. We do
not, in detail, define the steps that should be
taken by the technician to eliminate the
potential for mixing sample orders.
50Following Step...
- Corrective Action
- We have met with the technician responsible for
sample shipments, we reviewed the incident with
the technician. This issue will be discussed
with all technicians in the next team meetings. - The procedure covering the preparation and
shipment of sample orders will be reviewed and
updated as necessary to address this type of
issue.
51On changing procedures ...
Warning labels and large instruction manuals are
signs of failures, attempts to patch up problems
that should have been avoided by proper design in
the first place. The Design of Everyday Things,
by D. A. Norman, 1988, Doubleday.
- Procedures are the scar tissue of past mistakes
- Sherry Poriss, Performance Review Institute,
Warrendale, PA
52NOW YOU TRY IT ...
- The Case of the Capsized Ferry
- Get into teams
- Review the facts of the case,
- What is THE PROBLEM?
- Build a Logic Tree with post-it-notes
- Identify key Direct Causes
- Identify Contributing Factors
- Identify Latent Cause(s)
53Other Tools
54Chronological Timeline Tool
- The Logic Tree does not follow a timeline.
- Can be confusing.
- Building a timeline helps sort-out the order in
which events took place. - Might offer some cause/effect clues.
- BUT is often multiple tracks with parallel lines
which can itself be confusing.
55For Simple Problems, A 5 Whys Analysis May Work
- Why is our production rate so low?
- Well, the preheater pressure is maxed out.
- Why is the preheater pressure maxed out?
- Because the polymer melt viscosity is too high.
- So why is the polymer melt viscosity too high?
- Because the polymer melt temperature is low.
- Why is the polymer melt temperature low?
- The second-stage reactor temperature is low.
- Why is the second reactor temperature low?
- Because the process chemistry requires it to be
low.
56Need Another Why
- Why does the process chemistry require it to be
low? - Hey ... if we go to this new catalyst we can run
the second-stage reactor at a higher
temperature. - Just hit upon a corrective action!
- BUT Have we considered other factors?
- This is really just one branch of a Fault Tree.
57Sometimes the Tree Doesnt Help Much
- If you have a process with numerous inputs a
variety of process variables and an unpredictable
output, Logic Trees are not the best way to find
out why the output is varying. - Example Product X is frequently off-spec in
color. Color is influenced by temperature,
pressure, production rate, and an impurity in the
feedstock. - Statistical techniques are required.
- If you have a long list of potential causes.
- Not sure which ones need closer examination.
- The Whats Different tool is then useful.
58Whats Different Analysis
- Use this tool when it is not clear what changed
to lead to the undesired effect. - Compare problem cases to no problem cases.
59Whats Different Analysis
- Break the problem down into
- WHAT IS THE PROBLEM vs WHAT IS NOT?
- WHEN IS THE PROBLEM vs WHEN IS IT NOT?
- WHERE IS THE PROBLEM vs WHERE ISNT IT?
- THE SEVERITY OF THE PROBLEM?
- Look for a pattern in the difference
comparison. - Based on Kepner and Tragoe IS/IS NOT analysis
60EXAMPLE Excessive leaks in Unloading Hoses
- Customer complained that carrier hose fittings
often failed hydrostatic tests at their facility. - Truck sent back to originating plant with
customer complaint. - Yet hose fittings tested OK back at the terminal.
- Logic Tree working backward through series of
events did not pick up on any obvious causes. - Special hoses and connections for that customer
site? - Poor unloading procedure?
- Incompetent unloading personnel?
- Inadequate unloading facilities?
- Events and conditions seemed somewhat
contradictory.
61IS/IS NOT Analysis Kepner Tragoe
- Look for instances where the problem does NOT
occur. - Compare to where and when it DOES occur.
- In fact the customer had another site where the
leaks were not occurring (IS NOT). - Asking questions of the driver involved revealed
a critical DIFFERENCE between the two sites. - At the no-leak site the standard practice was to
have a cleaned hose from the previous trip
off-loaded and waiting in an interior location. - An arriving truck swapped hoses they used the
previous trucks hose to unload the arriving truck
- the new hose was stored inside for the next
load - NO LEAKS!
62IS/IS NOT Questions lead to new insights
- When leaking hoses from problem customer site
were tested later they had warmed up and did not
leak. - Good hoses left outside in the cold of winter
showed leaks. - DIRECT CAUSE
- Hoses that cooled down had couplings that shrank
away from the hose material allowing for slight
leaks. - LATENT CAUSE
- Inadequate unloading procedure that failed to
take into account the affect of changing
temperatures on hose coupling. - CORRECTIVE ACTION
- Apply same hose swap with other customer site.
63Corrective Action
- Develop corrective actions with the team or
virtual team - Monitor corrective action implementation
- Verification.
64Verification
- Review the corrective action after sufficient
time has elapsed since it was implemented. - Check that the corrective action was indeed
implemented and still in place. - Determine if there have been any recurrences
after the corrective action was implemented. - Dont have tunnel vision -- if the corrective
action was implemented because of a problem with
Customer X, it is not effective if it occurs
later with Customer Y. - If there is a recurrence, the corrective action
must be deemed Ineffective and the investigation
re-opened.
65Some key tools for developing effective
corrective actions
- Process Mapping
- RACI
- Applied Behavioral Analysis.
- Cognitive Psychology of Human Error.
- ISO Standards.
66PROCESS MAPPING
- Often a latent cause is tracked to some
malfunctioning part of a process. - Unfortunately processes work horizontally while
management is designed vertically. - Who is in charge of a horizontal process?
- Who can take managerial charge of a process that
needs to be fixed? - The answer is often unclear.
- Mapping the process with all stakeholders can
force the issue.
67Silos vs Processes
- Vertical organizational silos handling a process,
but who is the process owner?
Silo 1
Silo 2
Silo 3
Process
68PROCESS MAPPING
- The action of mapping a process with the various
silo owners present can lead to turf wars but
it can also lead to agreement on who owns
slices of the process. - Then you gain enough ownership to bring about
managerial impact on the changes needed for the
corrective action. - It helps to be building this for ISO - adds
respectability to the mapping process!
69PROCESS MAPPING
- For the purpose of building a corrective action
you need to define the process needing mapped. - Then identify the persons most likely to be
process owners. - Bring them together and with post-it-notes
construct the elements of the process paying
particular attention to the information flow
through the process. - Search for ways to change the process so that an
undesirable incident is less likely to occur.
70NEED RACI
- Although you may build acceptance regarding the
process map there is still room for
misunderstanding among the owners regarding
exactly who is responsible for doing what. - The RACI tool helps clarify the details so that
specifics of process interaction are precisely
defined. - RACI stands for RESPONSIBLE, ACCOUNTABLE,
CONSULTED, INFORMED
71RACI TOOL
- RESPONSIBLE Who is the person responsible for
carrying out the process step under examination? - ACCOUNTABLE Who is the person accountable for
seeing to it that the person responsible carries
out the task? - CONSULTED Is there a position or positions
within the organization who needs to be consulted
about the task? - INFORMED Is there anyone who needs to be
informed about the execution of the task?
72RACI Charting
- Identify all activities and decisions necessary
to run the day-to-day process effectively - Identify
- Who is Responsible (R)
- Who is Accountable (A)
- Who must be Consulted (C)
- Who must be Informed (I)
- Document on charts for reference
73RACI Definitions (cont.)
- Role Players are the positions in the
organization that have a task to perform.
Role Players
- Activity
- An action or decision that is one of several
sequential steps in the completion of a business
process.
74Analysis of RACI Chart
- Look For
- No or too many Rs
- No or too many As
- Too few As / Rs
- Every box filled in
- Lots of Cs
- Lots of Is
75Get Feedback and Buy-In
- Show the RACI chart to the representative groups
of people covering the roles on the chart - Capture their comments and revise the RACI chart,
if appropriate
76HUMAN ERROR
- There are circumstances where an undesirable
event was partially caused by a person within the
system who failed to do something that needed
done. - Dont just blame them! Judge how the failure
occurred. - Use the following test
- Didnt know how to do it.
- Didnt know to do it.
- Wouldnt do it.
- Didnt know they didnt do it.
77Corrective Actions for Behavior
Determine whats needed, i.e. resources,
training. Remove barriers.
Cant Do
If root cause is determined to be human error
or simply a case of people not doing what they
are supposed to do. Conduct a Root Cause
Analysis for Behavior.
Develop and communicate clear and agreed-upon
RACI.
Doesnt Know To Do
Ensure the right things are being reinforced,
especially when there are competing behaviors.
Wont Do
Slips
Need Mistake Proofing
78 Typical Corrective Actions
Cant Do
- The cant often relates to undeveloped skill or
knowledge. Training (one of the knee-jerk
automatic corrective actions) is the relevant
corrective action. - Possibly cant has more to do with unavailable
tools or materials. - Cant might even be involved with politics or a
decision that someone is not allowed to do it.
79What do you do with Didnt know how to do it?
- Cant do it relates often to undeveloped skill
or knowledge. - Sounds like training is needed.
- Possibly tool availability or use might be an
issue - computer example. - Ask ISO
- 6.2.2 Competence, awareness and training
- Someone needs to determine the necessary
competence. - Someone needs to offer the necessary training.
80Doesnt Know To Do Situations
- When the root cause is due to individuals who can
do the behavior, but do not know that they must
complete the task, then use the RACI tool. - RACI defines the types of participation and
involvement of all impacted team members.
81What do you do with Didnt know to do it?
- The person responsible did not know they were
responsible?
The person
accountable needs to straighten this out. - And check ISO
- Update job description etc.
- 6.2 Human resources
- 9004 points to the involvement of people.by
defining their responsibilities and authorities
82What do you do with Wouldnt do it?
- Put a gun to their head?
- Tell the boss?
- (Bosses are not always effective)
- Application of Behavioral Principles can help.
- Behavior affected by
- Antecedents
- Consequences
- Corrective actions can be centered around
creating the right mix of antecedents and
consequences.
83Applied Behavioral Analysis
- Solution based on a long history of psychological
research. - The term Behavior is precisely defined.
- Behavior is measurement based.
- Studies show behavior can be triggered by
incidents preceding it called ANTECEDENTS. - Behavior can be strengthened by the application
of resulting incidents following the behavior
called CONSEQUENCES.
84Wont Do Situations
- We address the individual who Wont Do a task
through a Consequence Plan. - Wont Do usually means
- A lack of natural positive consequences exist for
task completion. - Naturally occurring negative consequences exist
for the desired behavior. - Answer
- Plan and provide positive consequences for the
right behavior (to override the naturally
occurring negatives.) - Analyze whats being rewarded (from the
performers point of view.)
85Building a Consequence Plan
- If they dont do it there needs to be a
consequence (or twoetc) clearly following the
inaction that is recognized by the non-doer as
undesirable punishment. - When they DO do it there needs to be resultant
consequences that have a positive, reinforcing
effect. - Antecedents include clear messages that it needs
to be done and this is why.etc. - Antecedents can instill a belief that doing it
is a good thing.
86What do you do with Didnt know they didnt do
it?
- Asleep at the switch?
- YES, The psychology of human error
- Slips are a class of human error involving
unawareness of the error. - Occurs during skilful acts.
- An example could be typing errors
- Corrective actions do not include
- Punishment
- Re-training
- Reviewing procedures
87Types of Slips
- Capture Slip
- A pattern similar to another pattern (the desired
behavior) is triggered because it has a higher
frequency of execution. - Example Calling the wrong number because you
are used to calling it. - Associative Activation Slip
- Your actions are applied on the wrong thing, the
intention is correct but is misapplied. - Example The case of the wrong dog.
88Types of Slips
- Loss of Activation Slip
- The intent begins the action but short term
memory is suddenly loaded with something else and
you find yourself part-way through an action but
cannot remember why hence cannot complete the
act. - Example Why did I go upstairs?
89Correcting Slips
- Change the system under which the slip occurred.
- Redesign the way people interact within the
system. - Put into place immediate feedback loops.
- Design in checker routines.
- Re-program the computer.
- Include Mistake Proofing (Poka yoke)
90More Human Error Types
- Rule based errors
- A rule (known to be a good and true rule) is
applied to the wrong thing in the wrong setting
hence causing a problem. - Example
- RULE - If your car is going too fast, put on the
brakes. - But suppose you discover you are driving on ice?
91More Human Error Types
- Knowledge-based errors
- The situation is too far out-of-control for rules
to work - Rules were not constructed for this situation
- Instead you must figure out what to do from
scratch based upon your knowledge of the system. - Unfortunately your analysis can lead you
off-track and an error is made. - HELP? The more information you can provide the
better
92HUMAN ERROR What Do Researchers Tell Us?
- Instead of blaming the human who happens to be
involved, it would be better to try to identify
the system characteristics that led to the
incident and then to modify the design - One major step would be to remove the term
human error from our vocabulary. - One conviction that seems to be shared by all
members of the field studying human erroris a
rejection of the conventional approach to error
prevention, that of TRAINING and PUNISHMENT.
93FINAL MESSAGE
- Search for patterns underlying a family of
complaints. - Improving corrective actions means looking
further and deeper than fixing the direct cause
of a problem. - Let ISO help cue that search for deeper places to
look. - Change the system instead of blaming the
performers in it. - Identify and map out processes looking for ways
to improve the processes so the problem is less
likely to recur. - Apply principles of behavioral reinforcement to
susstain a true change in behavior.
94THE END.References
- Guidelines for Investigating Chemical Process
Incidents American Institute of Chemical
Engineers (1992). - The deductive approach starts at one point in
time (the event) and looks backward in time to
examine preceding events. - See also Current Reality Tree tool described in
Goldratts Theory of Constraints by H. William
Dettmer (ASQ Quality Press, 1997) - In building a Current Reality Tree, we work our
way from Undesirable Events back through the
chain of cause and effect to root causes.