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Safety Professional’s View

Behavior Based Safety. Safety Professional’s View. Objectives Today:. Identify differences between traditional vs BBS Know “ when and when not” to implement BBS Explain why most traditional safety programs don’t work!

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Safety Professional’s View

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  1. Behavior Based Safety Safety Professional’s View

  2. Objectives Today: • Identify differences between traditional vs BBS • Know “when and when not” to implement BBS • Explain why most traditional safety programs don’t work! • Understand why positive reinforcement is much more powerful than negative reinforcement

  3. Why Safety Programs Do Not Work: • Safety is a priority, not a value! • Safety is not managed in the same manner as production, quality, and cost issues! • Safety is not driven through continuous improvement!

  4. “Fallacies or Realities” in Safety Fables? • Conditions cause accidents! • Enforcing rules improves safety! • Safety professionals can keep workers safe! • Low accident rates indicate safety programs are working well! • Investigating to find the root cause of accidents will improve safety! • Awareness training improves safety! • Rewards improve safety!

  5. Core Elements in Successful Safety Programs • A culture that says “safety” is important around here! • A tight accountability system!

  6. Safety Intervention Strategies(By NSC) Approach# of Studies# of SubjectsReduction % Behavior Based 7 2,444 59.6% Ergonomics 3 n/a 51.6% Engineering Change 4 n/a 29.0% Problem Solving 1 76 20.0% Gov’t Action 2 2 18.3% Mgt. Audits 4 n/a 17.0% Stress Management 2 1,300 15.0% Poster Campaign 2 6,100 14.0% Personnel Selection 26 19,177 3.7% Near-miss Reports 2 n/a 0%

  7. Behavior Based Safety: What Is It? • An excellent tool for collecting data on the quality of a company’s safety management system • A scientific way to understand why people behave the way they do when it comes to safety • Properly applied, an effective next step towards creating a truly pro-active safety culture where loss prevention is a core value • Conceptually easy to understand but often hard to implement and sustain

  8. Behavior Based Safety:What It Is Not! • Only about observation and feedback • Concerned only about the behaviors of line employees • A substitution for traditional risk management techniques • About cheating & manipulating people & aversive control • A focus on incident rates without a focus on behavior • A process that does not need employee involvement

  9. Interventions: Always Consider These 3 Components SafetyManagementSystem Behaviors EngineeringControls

  10. Traditional Hierarchy of Safety Interventions Included: • Attempts to eliminate the hazard • Having employees work around the hazard • Guarding or warning employees about the hazard • Training employees to deal safely with the hazard

  11. Safety Management System Interventions 7 components • Management leadership • vision, values, commitment • safety goals & objectives • costs of safety performance • Responsibility & accountability • defined for management & employees • accountable for performance • Safety organization • safety committees • safety staff resource • safety budget

  12. Safety Management System Interventions 7 components (continued) • Safe work practices & procedures • general & job specific • housekeeping • contractors • emergency • Safety review & improvement • a Plan / Do / Check / Act process • accident investigation process • safety audit / inspection process

  13. Safety Management System Interventions 7 components (continued) • Safety training • Based on needs assessments • Designed & presented effectively • For both management & employees • Results in observable changes in behavior on the job • Safety communications • Internal & external • Appropriate for audience • Effectiveness of communication methods

  14. If Safety Interventions are Effective You Will See: • % of safe behaviors increasing and the % at-risk behaviors decreasing • Reporting of near misses / hits increasing • Both the number of observations and level of participation increasing • Frequency & severity of injuries decreasing • Increasing acceptance of responsibility and accountability for personal behavior

  15. “Business is Behavior”* A business succeeds or fails through the performance of allof its employees Success = “Good” performance Failure = “Bad” performance Performance = the combined results of a series of behaviors * Aubrey Daniels, author and behavioral psychologist

  16. Suggested BBS Process: • Discovery - Determine Behaviors That Have Greatest Loss Impact • Design - Identify Team Who Will Define & Design BBS Process • System Up - Implement BBS Observation Process & Collect Data • System Check - Ensure BBS Process Has Been Effectively Implemented

  17. Observations, Feedback & Data Collection • Use a design team of hourly workers, supervisors and managers, to design the process - forms, training, data collection and ID roles & responsibilities • Clearly define critical behaviors that will be observed - what is “safe” vs “at-risk”? • Give feedback on safe & at-risk behavior observed • Determine who will act on data collected through observations

  18. Use Prior Experience Data to Target Jobs for Observation • Loss runs from insurance carrier or broker • OSHA logs • First aid logs • Near miss / hit reports • Absenteeism / turnover reports

  19. Define Critical Behaviors - What is “Safe” & What is “At-risk”? • Focus on relevant behaviors that will have a direct impact on losses • Many behaviors that are directly related to the losses are unconscious behaviors that occur quickly • Select critical behaviors to focus on through actual observation of people at work - not just through discussion & brainstorming

  20. Obstacles To Success: • Poorly Maintained Facilities • Top-down Management Practices • Poor Planning/Execution • Inadequate Training

  21. Keys to Success: • Meaningful Employee Empowerment • Designing a Well Planned and Supported BBS Process • Managing BBS Process with Integrity

  22. Human Behavior is a function of : ðActivators (what needs to be done) ðCompetencies (how it needs to be done) ðConsequences (what happens if it is done)

  23. Human behavior is both: • ð Observable • ð Measurable therefore Behavior can be managed !

  24. Attitudesare inside a person’s head -therefore they are notobservable or measurable Attitudes can be changed by changing behaviors however

  25. ABC Model Antecedents (trigger behavior) Behavior (human performance) Consequences (either reinforce or punish behavior)

  26. Definitions: Activators: A person, place, thing or event that happens before a behavior takes place that encourages you to perform that behavior. Activators only set the stage for behavior or performance - they don’t controlit.

  27. Some examples of activators

  28. Definitions: Behavior:Any directly measurable thing that a person does, including speaking, acting, and performing physical functions.

  29. Some examples of behavior:

  30. Definitions: Consequences: Events that follow behaviors. Consequences increase or decrease the probability that the behaviors will occur again in the future. If you don’t send in that payment we’ll take you to court Oh please let it be Bob!

  31. Some example of Consequences:

  32. Consequences - How would you view them? Sunbathing Aggressive Drivers

  33. Only 4 Types of Consequences: • Positive Reinforcement (R+) ("Do this & you'll be rewarded") • Negative Reinforcement (R-) ("Do this or else you'll be penalized") • Punishment (P) ("If you do this, you'll be penalized") • Extinction (E) ("Ignore it and it'll go away") Behavior

  34. Consequences Influence Behaviors Based Upon Individual Perceptions of: Magnitude - large or small { • Significance- positive or negative Impact - personal or other Timing - immediate or future Consistency - certain or uncertain

  35. Both Positive (R+) & Negative (R-) Reinforcement Can Increase Behavior R+: any consequence that follows a behavior and increases the probability that the behavior will occur more often in the future - You get something you want R- : a consequence that strengthens any behavior that reduces or terminates the consequence - You escape or avoid something you don’t want

  36. Good safety suggestion Joe! Keep bringing ‘em up! R+ One more report like this and you’re outa here!! R-

  37. R+ Performance The effects of positive reinforcement Time

  38. Both Punishment & Extinction Decrease Behavior P: a procedure in which a punisher (consequence that decreases the frequency of the behavior it follows) is presented - You may get something you don’t want E: withholding or non-delivery of positive reinforcement for previously reinforced behavior - You don’t get what you want

  39. You bonehead!! You can kiss that bonus for this year good-bye.... and take a few days off without pay!!! P Let him cry honey. If we get up every night when he cries he’ll never learn to go to sleep peacefully. E

  40. P Performance The effects of punishment Time

  41. Performance E The effects of extinction Time

  42. If you see this type of performance curve, you can bet management by negative reinforcement is the predominant management style Performance Time

  43. What Employees Want: • A Safe Workplace • A Positive Workplace • To Take Care of One Another • To Stop the Hurt!

  44. What Management Wants: • An Accident Free Workplace • Empowered Employees • Pro-active Rather Than Re-active Work Process • To Minimize Direct and Indirect Costs and Threat of Liability From Accidents

  45. Why is one sign often ignored, the other one often followed?

  46. If you want to know what people find to be reinforcing.... observe what they do when they have the freedom to choose.

  47. The Behavior Based Safety Challenge: To create conditions that encourage people to collaborate because they want to not because they have to Let’s do it!!

  48. A Values-Based Process “Focus on the process….not results……they will come later!”

  49. Avoid The Following Headline: “Behavior Based Safety Scores Show Significant Improvement - while injury rate climbs!”

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