Accident Investigation - Key Concepts: Content DR Stephen Peckitt
Accident Investigation - Key Concepts: Content DR Stephen Peckitt
Accident Investigation - Key Concepts: Content DR Stephen Peckitt
Key Concepts
Content
Meanings & Paradigms
Dr Stephen Peckitt
Accident causation
Head of H&S CEMEA
theories
Bovis Lend Lease
What is an investigation
and why do it?
Interviewing witnesses
Analytical Methods
Case study
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Definitions of Accidents:
Causation Theories
Errors made at
business planning Latent Pathogens Active INCIDENTS
stage failures
Errors made during
task planning
Active Errors at the
workface – lapse,
mistake, short cuts
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
The focus and depth of the investigation will vary depending on the role
and expertise of those undertaking the investigation.
Fatal Incidents
Major Injury Incidents
Legally Reportable Incidents - > 3 day
Lost Time Injury Incidents
First Aid Injury Incidents
Near Misses – no injury
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
The Injury Pyramid – where to
focus our efforts?
Injury statistics Become reality here in
are commonly the form of damage to
the sole focus
Fatal people, property and
of safety the environment…
initiatives Major injury
Stating the apparent, immediate cause rather than the root cause.
Slip on oil spot on floor.
Evidence Gathering
• Gather the known facts about the incident to understand
the nature, scale, technical complexity, etc.
• Allocate appropriate resources to conduct investigation.
• Collect physical evidence at the scene.
• Identify witnesses and the organisations involved.
• Conduct interviews to establish:
• Who, What, Where, When, Why & How
• Keep probing for more information with open questions.
• Clarify understanding of the key issues with interviewees
• Don’t jump to conclusions and recommendations too quickly
• Go back and collect more evidence and statements if
needed
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Evidence Gathering
Physical Evidence
take pictures, copies of documents, measurements,
drawings, etc.
take possession of items for detailed examination or
evidence for legal case
obtain expert analysis of equipment
Interviewing People
Informal - information gathering
Formal - statement taking
Chain of evidence
Give receipts for all physical evidence obtained
All statements should be signed
Keep secure where they cannot be tampered with
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Evidence Gathering –
Investigator's Tools
Who to Interview?
Injured Person
Witnesses of the incident
Witnesses Pre-Accident
Witnesses Post-Accident
Supervisors
Managers
Maintenance, Housekeeping,
Engineering, Purchasing……...
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Interviewing Techniques
An interview is a structured conversation with a
purpose – to establish facts.
Respect
Non-Judgemental
Straight forward
Equal
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Interviewing Techniques
Put person at ease - Assure “no blame”
Listen carefully
Repeat the story back and check understanding
Be polite and thank the witness
Interview Techniques
FUNNELLING
General Open Question
At home Journey to Day at Journey
leads to an account of work work home
several smaller sections
Use 5 Whys
probe every
key issue
Closed
Closed Questions
LINK
Questions
clear-up Process is
repeated LINK
issues or Closed for every section
LINK
close out Questions Process is
repeated
line of Process is for every
enquiry repeated section
for every
section
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Interviewing Techniques
Questions & Perceptions
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Interviewing Techniques
Cognitive Interviewing
Memory is selective and stored in isolated fragments
which fade and become influenced by attitudes and
beliefs. Cognitive interview techniques can help
increase memory recall by 10%.
Interview Tips
Actively listen - concentrate, comprehend and sustain
Encouraging cues – open posture, eye contact, nod head, open hand
gestures, “uh huh”
Avoid misleading the witness – do not use leading questions, and opinion
Interviewing Techniques
Formal Statement Taking
INTERVIEWING Techniques
Venue – Your place or theirs?
Timing – Too soon, too late?
P - Plan & Prepare Witness Support – accompanied?
Agenda – what do you need?
Prepare key questions
Physical evidence verification
INTERVIEWING WITNESSES
Check understanding of key issues
Go through statement to agree content
C - Closure Witness to sign any changes and at end of
statement
Give them a copy
Ask if they have any questions?
Clarify what happens next
Thank them for their cooperation
Interview Techniques -
Summary
Conduct the interview as soon after the incident as possible.
Create a relaxed atmosphere, avoid blame, get all sides and
request ideas for prevention.
Keep the interview private to avoid group biases.
Focus on establishing facts, avoid irrelevancies, assumptions,
and smoke screens.
Ask open-ended non-leading questions to explore lines of
enquiry.
Listen, test understanding and validate key evidence with
closed questions.
Repeat the story back, probe into all aspects of the non-
conformance or accident, get all sides of the story.
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Fishbone
5 Whys
Decision / Event Trees
Management Oversight Risk Tree
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Fishbone Diagram
People Methods
Roots
Problem
Environment Equipment
Irrelevant
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Equipment
Leadership
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
RCA Incident
INVESTIGATION
PROCESS Emergency Response:
Rescue, Treat, Make Safe, Preserve, Record
Emergency Response:
Rescue and Treat Injured Persons
Make Safe
Evidence gathering
4Ps
Who What
Where When
When gathering evidence Phase 1
Why
it is useful to remember the 4Ps.
• Ensure that all relevant people
have been identified and
interviewed People
Parts
• Review the equipment and parts
of machinery which may have been
involved
• Consider the positions of people
and equipment at the time of the
incident Positions Paper
• Examine and collect copies of
relevant documents
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
RCA Terminology
Immediate causes
• Actions – acts directly contributing to the incident
• Conditions – environmental/operational factors directly contributing to
the incident
• Critical Factor – an immediate cause which if taken away would have
prevented the incident
Underlying causes
• Job Factors – how the task was planned and executed
• Organisational Factors – effectiveness of policies and systems
• Personnel Factors – attitudes, competencies, personality, perceptions
ROOT CAUSES – the factors at the end of the causal chain for each
critical factor – the causes which need to be addressed
to prevent reoccurrence.
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Immediate Causes
Conditions
Actions
1 – Open / Exposed edge (ext., Int.,
1 - Work at height (inc Access) platform, etc.)
2 – Lifting (Manual or 2 – Guards, protective devices or
mechanical) equipment
3 – Use of safety devices and 3 – Housekeeping
equipment
4 – Tools, equipment, plant
4 – Use of tools, equipment,
plant and machines 5 – Vehicle movements
5 – Use of PPE 6 – Lifting and Slinging
6 – Method of work 7 – Live systems or equipment (electrical /
mechanical)
7 – Communications
8 – Exposure to chemicals, noise,
8 – Operator error vibration, etc.
9 – Violation 9 – Environment (heat, cold, ventilation,
10 – Horse play weather, etc.)
11- other (specify) 10 – Structural failure
11 – Communications - instructions, signs,
barriers and warnings
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Investigation Report
Business Unit:
Investigation Completed by:
Date of Incident:
Severity of Incident (from list below):
Fatal/ Major Injury/High Potential Incident (minor injury or near hit)/ Ill health
Description of Incident
Who:
What:
Where:
When:
Why:
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
Actions:
Conditions:
Organisational factors:
Personnel factors:
Corrective Action(s) (ie actions to correct deficiencies - inc responsibilities, resources and timescales)
Preventative Action(s) ( ie actions to prevent situation occurring again - inc responsibilities, resources and timescales)
Lessons Learnt (i.e. what are the key learning points for the business to prevent this type of incident happening again)
Incident Investigations – Key Concepts
INVESTIGATION SUMMARY
When undertaking an incident investigation, think
carefully about who to involve and when – then act
quickly
Gather the evidence to answer – who, what, where,
when why and how
Stick to the facts and follow chains of evidence.
Analyse the evidence methodically using “5 Whys”
approach to identify root causes
Take the time to write the report correctly excluding
personal opinion. Avoid derogatory remarks, legal
buzzwords and jargon that can be misinterpreted or
difficult to explain.
Ensure corrective and preventative actions are identified
and implemented