ABSTRACT

Systems thinking tells us that human error, violations and technology failures result from poorly designed and managed work systems. To help us understand and prevent injuries and incidents, incident reporting systems must be capable of collecting data on contributory factors from across the overall work system, in addition to factors relating to the immediate context of the event (e.g. front-line workers, environment, and equipment).

This book describes how to design a practical, usable incident reporting system based on this approach. The book contains all the information needed to effectively design and implement a new incident reporting system underpinned by systems thinking. It also provides guidance on how to evaluate and improve existing incident reporting systems so they are practical for users, collect good quality data, and reflect the principles of systems thinking.

Features

  • Highlights the key principles of systems thinking for designing incident reporting systems
  • Outlines a process for developing and testing incident reporting systems
  • Describes how to evaluate incident reporting systems to ensure they are practical, usable, and collect good quality data
  • Provides detailed guidance on how to analyze incident data, and translate the findings into appropriate incident prevention strategies

chapter 1|16 pages

Systems Thinking and Incident Causation

chapter 2|22 pages

Systems Thinking and Incident Analysis

chapter 4|14 pages

Understanding the Context

chapter 7|20 pages

Evaluating Reliability and Validity

chapter 9|12 pages

Evaluating Usability

chapter 10|14 pages

Evaluating Data Quality

chapter 12|20 pages

Analyzing Incident Data

chapter 13|16 pages

Designing Incident Prevention Strategies