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Accident
Reporting & Investigation
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Reporting & Investigation

Accident Reporting, Investigation
‘ Those who cannot remember the past are
condemned to repeat it’
Incidents can
yield positive results if we learn from what
went wrong and prevent a reoccurrence. To
achieve this we need to investigate the
circumstances that led to the incident and
report, record, analyses and correct its
effects. This requires personnel trained in
accident reporting and investigation techniques
all of which is an essential element of any
effective safety management system. It is
important to
conduct accident investigations
with accident prevention in mind. Investigations
are NOT to place blame. Too often investigations
degenerate into fingerprinting, blame fixing and
fault-finding exercises because the persons
involved do not understand the reasons for or
real value which can be gained from good
accident investigations.
Accident/incident investigations are a tool for
uncovering hazards that either were missed
earlier or have managed to slip out of the
controls planned for them.
There are indeed significant
gains from good quality incident investigations:
-
Learn from
what went wrong
-
Determine
the causes
-
Prevent
recurrence
-
Improve the
work environment
-
Meet
regulatory requirements
-
Cost of
incidents
-
Moral
Obligation
-
Define
trends
-
Provision of
information in case of litigation
-
Reduction of
operating costs by control of accidental
losses
-
Expression
of concern by management
Effective
incident investigation:
-
Establishes
the facts (Who? What? When? Where? The size?)
-
Analyses the
facts isolating contributory factors:
-
Identifies
who or what was involved
-
Identify
what hazards were present?
-
Establishes
what controls failed?
-
Identifies
actions to prevent a recurrence
-
Implements
the corrective actions
You need to
gather
evidence
from many sources including witnesses and
observations during an investigation:
-
Inspect the accident site
before any changes occur
-
Ensure
Photographs of the scene are taken
and video footage if possible before
anything is moved, both of the general area
and specific items.
-
If there is a possibility that
the accident could become a fatality the scene
must remain undisturbed until viewed by HSA
Inspector and Police where required.
-
Arrange for survey plans of the
site to be prepared. These should include:
-
Locality Plan & details of
accident site
-
Detailed plan of view showing
details after the accident and include such
things as: Equipment used in rescue
operations; Position of materials, ladders,
equipment, etc. involved in the accident;
Position from where photographs were taken;
Position of persons involved in the accident
(victims & witnesses),
machinery, energy sources, and
hazardous materials
and other relevant information.
Consider
plant line up, valve alignment, tools labels,
area signage, machinery, tools or equipment
that could have contributed to the accident.
-
A sectional view (if
necessary). Any sections made are to be marked
on the detailed plan
-
Take evidence from witnesses at
the scene and make note of any items for
evidence (signed statements are desirable)
-
Record pre-accident conditions,
the accident sequence and post-accident
conditions
-
Check relevant equipment,
maintenance and training records.
Broken equipment, debris, and
samples of materials involved may be removed
for further analysis by appropriate experts.
-
Check MSDS’s, codes of
practice, procedures,
pre-start
checklists, permits, area rules and standards.
Documents containing normal
operating procedures, flow diagrams,
maintenance charts, or reports of difficulties
or abnormalities are particularly useful.
-
Analyse condition of equipment
materials with specialist input where
necessary
Prepare a preliminary report
detailing the circumstances of the accident
within 24 hours and submit to relevant
management.
Most of the information relating
to an incident is likely to come from people so
it is important that interviews are carried out
as a calm, objective search for facts not an
interrogation or cross examination to find the
‘guilty party’.
Having
determined what happened, the next stage of the
investigation involves the incident analysis:
-
Determine
what happened –immediate cause –unsafe
practices/conditions (ask the question would
the accident have happened if this particular
factor was not present
-
Determine
why it happened basic causes –personal/job
factors
-
Cover
deficiencies in the management system
-
Would the
accident have happened if this particular
factor were not present?
-
Determine
appropriate remedial action based on the
immediate and basic causes
-
Apportion
responsibility to implement corrective actions
-
Report
findings to senior management
-
Follow-up
and monitor corrective actions
In conclusion comprehensive
procedures for accident investigation and
analysis is an essential element of any
effective safety management system best assured
when
you:
-
Encourage a no-blame reporting
culture
-
Focus must be to improve
working conditions and methods
-
Approach with an open and
objective mind
-
All facts learnt corrective
action taken
-
Fact finding not fault finding
-
Consider as an opportunity for
employees and management to work together to
correct an unacceptable situation
-
Realise an incident will happen
again if underlying causes are not corrected
-
Delve deep to establish
underlying causes do not accept all answers
given at face value
-
Be prepared to look beyond the
injured person, his co-workers, supervisor,
manager
-
Consider communication skills
and language barriers
-
Get as much factual information
as possible to get the complete picture
But: REMEMBER:
Accident Prevention Makes Accident Attention
Unnecessary

For Lots More
Information Visit Some Of
The
Best Accident
Related Websites:
Irish HSA
Accident Notification information and
Accident Statistics
UK IChemE comprehensive
information source on major
Incidents
UK Environment Agency Guidance
on
Pollution Incident Response Planning
UK HSE Report on
Accident Investigation and
Accident Costs
UK HSE
Major Incident Response and Investigation Policy
and Procedures and
Work Related Deaths:
Investigators Guide
Accident Investigation Training
website
NCEC: The
National Chemical Emergency Centre a useful UK
based organization which provides clear,
impartial advice for chemical health-and-safety
compliance and for emergencies
UK guidance on use of
Digital Images as Evidence
University of Cardiff based
Chemical Incidents Hotline
Ility Engineering for
Information on Incidents
EU research on
Work Related Accidents
EU Environment Commission
information on
Civil Protection and Environmental Accidents
US site on
Injury Research and Control
The
Investigation
Process Research Library
US EPA
Emergency Sub Topics
Center for Research on the
Epidemiology of Disasters
US based
OSHA Accident Investigation information,
Safety Pays software and
Fatal Facts information
CHEMSAFETY.gov is the US Chemical Safety and
Hazard Investigation Board's site, it
investigates major chemical accidents
US based
OSHA Studies of Occupational Fatalities.
Links to OSHA reports of fatality/catastrophe
investigations
United States
Chemical
Safety & Hazard Investigation Board
Australian guidance on
Learning from Accidents
Canadian based information on
Reporting and Investigating Accidents
Canadian
Hazard Alert Information
Information on
Bhopal
New Zealand information on
Aftermath -
The Social and Economic Consequences of
Workplace Injury and Illness
NZ
Accident Alerts
Mineral Resources Forum on
Major Mining Incident
Investigation Process
Research Library
Natural
Hazards
Natural
Disaster Reference Database
Natural
Landslide
Information Centre
International
Landslide
Research Group
Near Miss Project
UNEP site on Awareness and Preparedness for
Emergencies at Local Level (APELL)
Emergency Events Database (EMDAT)
Crane
Accidents
Consultnet Affordable Pre-written Training
Packages
‘Customisable
So You Can Add Specifics On Your Own Workplace
and Saves Hours of Preparation Time’
Incident Reporting and Investigation
(€28
+ 21% VAT)
A series of some 50 Power Point slides with
comprehensive information on incident reporting
and investigation, includes the lesson plan,
sample procedure, case study, training
record sheet and training evaluation form,
topics covered:
v
Introduction
v
Incident Response
v
Incident Investigation
v
Incident Analysis
v
Remedial Actions
v
Incident Report
v
Near Miss Reporting
v
Cost of incidents
v
Incident Statistics
v
Summary of Responsibilities
To Order:
click
here
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