ABSTRACT

The technological age has seen a range of catastrophic and preventable failures, often as a result of decisions that did not appropriately consider safety as a factor in design and engineering. Through more than a dozen practical examples from the author‘s experience in nuclear power, aerospace, and other potentially hazardous facilities, Choosing Safety is the first book to bring together probabilistic risk assessment and decision analysis using real case studies. For managers, project leaders, engineers, scientists, and interested students, Michael V. Frank focuses on methods for making logical decisions about complex engineered systems and products in which safety is a key factor in design - and where failure can cause great harm, injury, or death.

chapter 1|13 pages

Choosing Safety

An Overview

chapter 2|14 pages

Safety, Risk, and Hazard Concepts

chapter 6|14 pages

The Blade-Trade Case Study

chapter 11|11 pages

Choosing Safety

The Final Analysis