Theory Accident - Osha
Theory Accident - Osha
Theory Accident - Osha
Accidents in Construction
Why do accidents happen in construction?
Physical hazards Environmental hazards Human factors No safety regulations or poor ones Poor communication within, between, and among various trades working on a job site
because hazards exist. For every accident that occurs, there is a cause.
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causation:
Domino theory Human factors theory Accident / incident theory Epidemiological theory Systems theory Combination theory Behavioral theory
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Domino Theory
Herbert W. Heinrich Travelers Insurance
Company In the late 1920s, studying reports of 75,000 workplace accidents, he concluded the following:
88% of accidents are caused by unsafe acts committed by fellow workers 10% of accidents are caused by unsafe conditions 2% of accidents are unavoidable
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Conclusions laid foundation for Axioms of Industrial Safety (came to be known as the Domino Theory)
1. 2. 3. 4. Injuries result from a completed series of factors, one of which is the accident itself. An accident can occur only as the result of an unsafe act by a person or a physical or mechanical hazard, or both. Most accidents are the result of unsafe behavior by people. An unsafe act by a person or an unsafe condition does not always immediately result in an accident or injury. The reasons why people commit unsafe acts can serve as helpful guides in selecting corrective actions. The severity of an accident is largely fortuitous, and the accident that caused it is largely preventable.
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5.
6.
Heinrich believed any safety programs taking all 10 axioms into consideration will likely be effective.
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Domino Theory
3.
4.
5.
Ancestry and social environment. Negative character traits that may lead people to behave in an unsafe manner can be inherited (ancestry) or acquired as a result of the social environment. Fault of person. Negative character traits, whether inherited or acquired, are why people behave in an unsafe manner and why hazardous conditions exist. Unsafe acts and mechanical or physical hazards. Unsafe acts committed by people and mechanical or physical hazards are the direct causes of accidents. Accident. Typically, accidents that result in injury are caused by falling or being hit by moving objects. Injury. Typical injuries resulting from accidents include lacerations and fractures.
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Domino Theory
Two central points:
Injuries are caused by preceding factors By removing the unsafe act or hazardous condition, the action of these preceding factors is negated and the accidents/injuries are prevented.
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distributor of lumber, pipe and concrete products. Warehouse personnel load most of the orders by hand therefore they are required to wear personal protective gear. Management observed increases in minor injuries among personnel during summer months. However during the last summer CEE 698 Construction Health and Safety they suffered from the serious back injuries
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ultimately caused by human error. Consists of three broad factors that lead to human error:
Overload Inappropriate Response Inappropriate Activities
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Overload
Inappropriate Activities
Inappropriate Response
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Overload
Capacity product of such factors as a
persons natural ability, training, state of mind, fatigue, stress, and physical condition. Load consisting of tasks for which a person is responsible and added burdens resulting from environmental factors (noise, heat), internal factors (personal problems, stress), and situational factors (unclear instructions). State the product of a persons motivational levels. Overload an imbalance between a persons capacity at a any given time and the load that CEE 698 is Construction Healthin and Safety the person carrying a given state. 14
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with regard to size, force, reach, feel and similar factors can lead to accidents and CEE 698 Construction Health and Safety
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Inappropriate Activities
Human error can be result of inappropriate
activities. Examples:
Person who undertakes a task that he / she does not know how to do. A person who misjudges the degree of risk involved in a given task and proceeds on that misjudgment.
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sees rapid growth in sales which overwhelmed companys work force. New teams of cabinet makers and installers hired. Authorized unlimited overtime. Numbers of accidents and injuries increased.
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three categories:
Overload:
Employees working beyond their personal limits and beyond their capabilities. Stress, insufficient training and fatigue
Inappropriate response:
Carpenters removing the safeguards to speed up construction.
Inappropriate activities:
Assigning employees to duties for which they are not fully trained
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Accident/Incident Theory
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well-earned reputation as a safe company. When the safety manager of the firm, Jack Bond, was elected as the president of a statewide safety organization, safety problems within the firm began. Jack Bond neglected his duties at PPC. Workers stopped following the safety precautions once they realized he had CEE 698 Construction Health and Safety stopped observing and correcting them. 23
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Epidemiological Theory
Epidemiology: Study of causal relationships
between environmental factors and disease. Epidemiological theory holds that the models used for studying and determining these relationships can also be used to study casual relationships between environmental factors and accidents. Components:
Predisposition Characteristics CEE 698 Construction Health and Safety Situational Characteristics
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Epidemiological Theory
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loading unit for Construction Products, Inc. She had 2 days of training on proper lifting techniques before beginning the work and mandatory use of back-support belts Her supervisor and colleagues pressured to disregard the proper lifting methods she learned in training. She followed her supervisor and after 2 months had to undergo major surgery to repair two ruptured disks. CEE 698 Construction Health and Safety Predisposition factor: Her susceptibility to pressure
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Systems Theory
System a group of regularly interacting and interrelated
components that together form a unified whole. An accident may occur as a system which is composed of:
Person Machine Environment
these components interact. Example: A worker who temporarily replaces an experienced crane operator increases the probability of an accident.
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Systems Theory
The primary components of the systems model are
the person, machine, environment, and information; decisions; risks; and the task to be performed. Each of these components has a bearing on the probability that an accident will occur.
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Systems Theory
Factors which should be considered before
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for residential construction jobs. Workers including the apprentices use manually operated machines which causes two problems:
It is difficult for even experienced workers to make clean accurate cuts Machines are so old that they frequently break down.
careless and runs his hand into the saw blade. The person-machine-environment chain: Person involved was inexperienced. Machine involved was old and prone to breakdown The environment was stressful and pressure-packed.
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Combination Theory
Often the cause of an accident cannot be
adequately described by one theory. Differences between the theory and reality may exist. Combination theory helps explain the actual cause of an accident by combining different parts of several theories.
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four large warehouses . Ventilation of these warehouses are important and the vent filters need to be changed periodically. Changing the vents filter involves two potential hazards:
Unvented dust and fumes can make breathing difficult. Vents are located 110 feet above the ground level, which can be accessed through a narrow cat walk that has kneehigh guardrails.
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to change one of the filter. His lifeline held him for 20 minutes. When he panicked and tried to pull himself up he knocked the buckle of his safety harness open and fell to the concrete floor, breaking his neck. Critical factors: Absence of supervisor Inexperience of worker A conscious decision by the worker to disregard the safety procedures A faulty buckling mechanism on the safety harness An unsafe design (only a knee-high guardrail on the catwalk)
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Behavioral Theory
Referred to as Behavior-based safety
(BBS) E. Scott Geller Safety Performance Solutions, Inc., and professor of psychology
Believes in 7 basic principles of BBS: 1. Use intervention that is focused on employee behavior. 2. Identify external factors that aid in understanding and improving employee behavior.
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Behavioral Theory
3. Direct behavior with activator or events antecedent to the desired behavior, and motivate employees to behave as desired with incentives and rewards that follow desired behavior. 4. Focus on the positive consequences that result from the desired behavior as a way to motivate employees. 5. Apply scientific method to improve attempts at behavioral interventions. 6. Use theory to integrate information rather than to limit possibilities. 7. Plan interventions with the feelings and attitudes of the individual employee in mind.
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model in turning the unsafe behavior pattern of the workers (not wearing hard hats) in Bonded Builders, Inc.
1. He removed the old Hard Hat Area signs and replaced them with newer, more noticeable signs. 2. He scheduled a brief seminar on head injuries in which he told a story of two employees. One was in a hospital bed surrounded by family members he did not even recognize; the other was shown enjoying aConstruction family Health outing with happy family CEE 698 and Safety members.
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