ABSTRACT

The Cause, Effect, and Control of Accidental Loss takes the reader through 15 phases of a typical workplace accident and shows how accidents can be prevented by the introduction of safety management controls in the form of a structured health and safety management system (SMS). It proposes that once the event has been triggered, there is no certainty as to the outcome, so workplaces should rely on proactive safety actions rather than reactive ones. Now fully updated, this new edition expands on the important concepts from the first edition, including hazard identification, risk assessment, flawed safety management systems, the potential for loss, and management control.

This title:

  • Challenges the paradigm that the measure of consequence (losses) is a good indicator of safety effort
  • Introduces three luck factors that determine the course of the accident sequence
  • Explains what causes accidents, their consequences, and how to prevent them
  • Showcases accident immediate causes including high-risk (unsafe) acts and high-risk (unsafe) conditions

The text is an essential read for professionals, graduate students, and academics in the field of occupational health, safety, and industrial hygiene.

part 1|102 pages

Accidental Loss – The Cause

chapter 1|18 pages

Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment

chapter 3|12 pages

Root Causes of Accidental Loss

chapter 5|8 pages

Luck Factor 1

chapter 7|6 pages

Potential for Loss

chapter 8|8 pages

Exposure, Impact, or Exchange of Energy

part 2|60 pages

Accidental Loss – The Effect

chapter 9|5 pages

Luck Factor 2

chapter 10|15 pages

Injury, Illness, and Disease

chapter 11|7 pages

Property and Equipment Damage

chapter 12|6 pages

Business Interruption

chapter 13|7 pages

Luck Factor 3

chapter 14|10 pages

Severity of an Injury

chapter 15|8 pages

Costs of Accidental Loss

part 3|30 pages

Accidental Loss – The Control

chapter 16|8 pages

Safety Management Functions

chapter 17|11 pages

Safety Management Control

chapter 18|9 pages

Health and Safety Management Systems (SMS)