MODULE 2 Basic Concept

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SAFETY MANAGEMENT

SYSTEM
MODULE 2
BASIC SAFETY CONCEPT
Objective

• At the end of this module, participants will be


able to explain the strengths and weaknesses of
traditional methods to manage safety, and
describe new perspectives and methods for
managing safety

Your Date
10/14/2018
Outline
• Concept of safety
• The evolution of safety thinking
• A concept of accident causation – Reason model
• The organizational accident
• People, context and safety – SHEL(L) model
• Errors and violations
• Organizational culture
• Safety investigation
• Points to remember

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WHAT??
What is your own definition of safety?

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“Freedom from unacceptable risk of harm.”

BUT
Absolute freedom does NOT exist – no human
activity or man-made system is absolutely
safe.

STILL
Risks have to be identified and managed

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Concept of safety (Doc 9859)
Definition of Safety (ICAO)

The state in which risks associated


with aviation activities, related to,
or in direct support of the
operation are reduced and
controlled to an acceptable level.

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Safety
❖ Traditional approach – Preventing accidents
➢ Focus on outcomes (causes)
➢ Unsafe acts by operational personnel
➢ Attach blame/punish for failures to “perform safely”
➢ Address identified safety concern exclusively
➢ Regulatory compliance
❖Identifies:

WHAT? WHO? WHEN?

But not always discloses:

WHY? HOW?

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The evolution of safety thinking

TECHNICAL FACTORS

HUMAN FACTORS

TODAY
ORGANIZATIONAL FACTORS

1950s 1970s 1990s 2000s


Fuente: James Reason

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What is accident ?

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Incident, accident safety occurrences,..

• Incident : occurrence, other than an


accident, associated with the
operation of an aircraft which affects
or could affect the safety of operation

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A concept of accident causation

Latent conditions trajectory

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The organizational accident

Organizational processes

Workplace ➢Policy-making Latent


conditions ➢Planning conditions
➢Communication
➢Allocation of resources
Active ➢Supervision
Defences
failures ➢ ...

Activities over which any organization has a reasonable degree


of direct control
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The organizational accident

Organizational processes

Workplace ➢ Poor Design Latent


conditions ➢ Inadequate hazard conditions
identification
➢ Ineffective Training
Active ➢ Inadequate
Defences
failures Supervision

Conditions present in the system before the accident, usually hidden


within an organisation until they are triggered by an event likely to have
serious consequences.
Your Date
The organizational accident

Organizational processes

Workplace Latent
conditions conditions
➢Technology
➢Training
Active ➢Regulations Defences
failures

Resources to protect against the risks that organizations involved


in production activities generate and must control.
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The organizational accident

Organizational processes

➢ Workforce stability
Workplace ➢ Qualifications and Latent
conditions experience conditions
➢ Morale
➢ Credibility
Active ➢ Ergonomics Defences
failures ➢ ...

Factors that directly influence the efficiency of people in


aviation workplaces.
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The organizational accident

Organizational processes

Workplace Latent
conditions conditions

➢Errors
Active
failures
➢Violations Defences

Actions or inactions by people (pilots, controllers, maintenance


engineers, aerodrome staff, etc.) that have an immediate adverse effect.
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What differences between Error and
Violation?

Error Violation
There is a
there is no voluntary act, not
intention in error complying the
rule

We can’t decide
Most frequent
to not
reason
committing error

Ex: I have the sun Ex: I see a high


in the eyes, I ran speed car coming
the redlight, I did behind me I ran
not see it the redlight
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The perspective of the organizational
accident
Organizational processes
Improve Identify
Monitor
Workplace Latent
conditions conditions

Reinforce
Contain
Active
Defences
failures

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People and safety

• Aviation workplaces involve complex


interrelationships among its many
components

• To understand operational performance, we


must understand how it may be affected by
the interrelationships among the various
components of the aviation work places

Source: Dedale

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ICEBERG

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The SHEL(L) model
Understanding the relationship between people and operation
contexts
❖ Software
S ❖ Hardware
❖ Environment
H L L ❖ Liveware

E ❖ Liveware, other
persons
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Operational performance and technology
• In production-intensive
industries like
contemporary aviation,
technology is essential
• As a result of the massive
introduction of technology,
the operational
consequences of the
interactions between
people and technology are
often overlooked, leading
to human error
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Understanding operational errors
• Human error is
considered contributing
factor in most aviation
occurrences
• Even competent
personnel commit errors
• Errors must be accepted
as a normal component
of any system where
humans and technology
interact

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Processes and outcomes

Causes and
consequences
of operational
errors are not
linear in their
magnitude

Source: Dedale
Errors and safety – A non linear relationship

Statistically, millions of
operational errors are made
before a major safety
breakdown occurs

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Three strategies for the control of human error
• Error reduction strategies
intervene at the source of
the error by reducing or
eliminating the
contributing factors
• Human-centred design
• Ergonomic factors
• Training
• …

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Three strategies for the control of human error
• Error capturing strategies
intervene once the error
has already been made,
capturing the error
before it generates
adverse consequences
• Checklists
• Task cards
• Flight strips
• …

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Three strategies for the control of human error

• Error tolerance strategies intervene to


increase the ability of a system to accept
errors without serious consequence

• System redundancies
• Structural inspections
•…

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Culture

• Culture binds people together as members of groups


and provides clues as to how to behave in both
normal and unusual situations

• Culture influences the values, beliefs and behaviours


that people share with other members of various
social groups

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Three cultures

National

Organizational

National
Professional

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Three distinct cultures

• National culture encompasses the value system


of particular nations
• Organizational/corporate culture differentiates
the values and behaviours of particular
organizations (e.g. government vs. private
organizations)
• Professional culture differentiates the values and
behaviours of particular professional groups (e.g.
pilots, air traffic controllers, maintenance
engineers, aerodrome staff, etc.)
• No human endeavour is culture-free
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Organizational/corporate culture

• Sets the boundaries for acceptable behaviour in


the workplace by establishing norms and limits.
• Provides a frame work for managerial and employee
decision-making
• “This is how we do things here, and how we
talk about the way we do things here”

• Organizational/corporate culture shapes – among


many others – safety Reporting procedures and
practices by operational personnel

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Three options

• Organizations and the management of


information
• Pathological – Hide the information
• Bureaucratic – Restrain the information
• Generative – Value the information
Source: Ron Westrum

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Three possible organizational cultures

Pathological Bureaucratic Generative

Information Hidden Ignored Sought

Messengers Shouted Tolerated Trained

Responsibilities Shirked Boxed Shared

Reports Discouraged Allowed Rewarded

Failures Covered up Merciful Scrutinized

New ideas Crushed Problematic Welcomed


Resulting Conflicted “Red tape” Reliable
organization organization organization organization
Source: Ron Westrum

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Safety culture

• A trendy notion with potential for


misperceptions and misunderstandings
• A construct, an abstraction
• It is the consequence of a series of
organizational processes (i.e., an outcome)
• Safety culture is not an end in itself, but a
means to achieve an essential safety
management prerequisite: Effective safety
reporting

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Effective safety reporting – Five basic traits

Information Flexibility
People are knowledgeable about the human, technical and People can adapt reporting
when facing unusual
organizational factors that determine the safety of the system circumstances, shifting from
as a whole. the established mode to a
direct mode thus allowing
Willingness information to quickly reach
the appropriate decision-
People are willing to making level.
report their errors and
Effective safety
experiences.
reporting
Learning
People have the competence
to draw conclusions from
Accountability safety information systems
and the will to implement
People are encouraged (and rewarded) for providing essential
major reforms.
safety-related information. However, there is a clear line that
differentiates between acceptable and unacceptable behaviour.

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Safety investigation

• For “funereal” purposes


• To put losses behind
• To reassert trust and faith in the system
• To resume normal activities
• To fulfil political purposes

• For improved system reliability


• To learn about system vulnerability
• To develop strategies for change
• To prioritize investment of resources
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Safety Investigation

Report and
Data Collection Data Analysis Recommen-
dations

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Accident investigation – Once in a
million flights

Error Deviation Amplification Degradation /


breakdown
Safety management – On almost every
flight

Error Deviation Amplification Normal flight

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