Advanced Topics in Behavioral Safety

Download Report

Transcript Advanced Topics in Behavioral Safety

Advanced Topics in BBS
Chris Goulart CSP, MS, ARM, CDT, CSHM
Director of Safety Services
RCI Safety
GROUND RULES
• Ask a LOT Of Questions
• Don’t take Copious Notes
• Be Skeptical
Objectives
• – A Theoretical Approach
– The Science of BBS
– Beyond the ABC’s
– Defining How Behavioral Psychology and Cognitive
Psychology Function in BBS
– Safety Culture and Behavior
– Current and Future Research
– Self Observations
– The Observer Effect
– Psychological Factors Involving Safety
Objectives
• – Practical Application
– Review recent trends in the field of Behavioral
Safety
– Selecting the Right Behaviors …Risk Assessment Vs.
Pinpointing
– Responding to the Criticisms of BBS
– BBS in the long-term
– Discuss the Future of the Discipline
– Results – Documented, Expected, how to Get the
Most from the Process
– Talk about Events and Where to get more
Information
SAFETY
PYRAMID
Safety
pyramid
1 fatality
30 Major injuries
300 Minor injuries
Unsafe Acts/Conditions
Attitudes/Behaviors
Culture (Mgmt. Driven)
3000 Incidents which did not
cause harm (ie near miss)
30 000 at-risk behaviours
The level at which Risk Taking
is supported by the workplace
system.
5
Can We FINALLY put the Triangle
to Rest???
• The Research of Heinrich has ALWAYS Been
Suspect.
• The Recent Article by Manuele (October 2011)
casts lots of Legitimate Doubts
• The Causal Factors the Drive Injuries and
Accidents are Complex and Almost Always
Systemic in Nature
• A Behavioral Component to Safety is Necessary
and Important, but NOT a Silver Bullet
What Makes Behavior Based
Safety So Effective?
Science
7
What is the Science Behind
Behavioral Safety?
• B. F. Skinner – Developed the
concept of Operant
Conditioning… Organisms are
motivated by how their behavior
OPERATES on the environment.
• Pavlov – Developed the concept
of Classical Conditioning also
known as associative learning –
Organisms are motivated
through paired stimuli.
8
Behavioral Safety
• Founded on the principles of Operant
Conditioning.
• Is Generally Behavioral but has Incorporated
Elements of Cognitive Psychology as well (More
Later)
• It is known that Reinforcement is the best way to
Manage Behavior
• Positive Reinforcement has been shown to be most
effective as it Optimizes Discretionary Effort
(Daniels)
9
History of Behavioral Safety
• 1920’2 – 1950’s Dr. B.F. Skinner a Harvard
Professor developed the concept of “Behaviorism”
• 1960’s Aubrey Daniels incorporate operant
conditioning into a concept he called
“performance management”
• Term Behavior Based Safety first used by Dr.
Komaki in 1978
• Behavior Based Safety Becomes a Mainstream
Safety Approach 1980’s - Present
10
The ABCs of Human Behavior
A
Antecedent
B
Behavior
C
Consequence
Beyond the ABC’s
• We know Antecedents, Behaviors, and
Consequences…
• But how Often do We Apply this Knowledge?
• ABC Analysis, extremely useful but rarely
used.
• Antecedents, the forgotten part of BBS
– “Nudge” Concept
– Aligning Antecedents with Consequences
– Capitalizing on Natural vs Artificial Antecedents
Behavioral Psych Vs
Cognitive Psych
• Behavioral Psych – All that matters is the
Behavior and How the Consequences to that
Behavior Motivate or Exterminate Future
Behavior
• Cognitive Psych – All that matters is
Motivation, Thoughts, and Emotion,
Behavior is Secondary
• BBS, when done the Right Way, resides
Somewhere in Between
Safety Culture
• Shared assumptions of safety in the workplace
that drive motivation and behaviors based on
values, traditions, and history
• Clearly a leading indicator and the one most
closely linked with outcome performance (The
relationship between employees’ perceptions of safety and organizational culture Michael
O’Toole) (Journal of Safety Research 2002 #33 231-243) (Also, Petersen, 2001, Krause, 2004,
Cooper, 2009, Geller et. Al 2011 Professional Safety)
• What employees do when no one is
watching…(Schien)
Safety Culture
• Management Driven
• Set in motion by the founders of the
organization
• Is very self sustaining and self reinforcing
• Not really separate from Organizational Culture
(Constituent Component)
• Influenced by both local and industry cultural
norms
Is Safety Culture the Same thing as
Behavior… NO!!!
• A Behavioral Safety Process
can enhance numerous
aspects of the culture
• A Behavioral Safety Process is
more likely to be successful if
the Safety Culture is known
Culture
Safety Culture = Cognitive
Psychology
Behavior Based Safety =
Behavioral Psychology
16
Observer Effect
• The behavior of the observer changes
dramatically as a result of conducting
observations
• An excellent study by John Austin, Western
Michigan, showed that observers improve their
own behavior by 75% over a baseline
• Interestingly safety training was shown to have
no effect on performance in the same study
Austin, chapter in “The values based safety process (2nd ed.)”. New York:
Van Nostrand-Reinhold.
Hawthorne Effect
• Persons who know they are being observed
change their inherent performance to meet
the expectations of the observer
• May not be intentional
• Causes some elevation in the % safe scores
• Allows for the application of more positive
reinforcement for observed safe behavior
Self Observation and
Self Feedback
• Good research indicates this is a viable
methodology for lone workers
• They must receive outside prompts to require
them to asses their postures, behaviors, and
activities
• Prompts must be sent several times per day
• Must involve education about what is expected
prior to the Self-Observation Process
• No research done into habituation yet (longterm exposure to the process)
“Self Monitoring Promoting Behavior Change”
Hsiang Huang, Yueng et al… Professional Safety November, 2008
Quality Observations
• Validation of the skill
and accuracy of the
observer
• Conducted by members
of the Behavioral Safety
Steering Committee
• Should be done with
every observer at least
once a quarter
Barriers and their
Role as Antecedents…
• Barriers are obstacles that
prevent persons from
working safely
• Barriers may be physical,
procedural, or personal
• Barriers often function as
antecedents for
prompting unsafe or
undesirable behaviors
Metrics
• Contact Rate
• Percentage of Positive
Feedback
• Barriers Identified
• Action Items Closed
• Participation by Observers
• Quality Observation Percent
Looking Forward
• Behavioral Safety
Process Maturation
• The influence of
Behavioral Safety on
other business
disciplines
• The use of Behavior to
manage other activities
Looking Forward
• Generating information on the ROI of
Behavioral Safety, including the cost to
implement and the cost of observations and
feedback
• Compared to the benefits of reduced
injuries, improved employee morale, and
enhanced productivity
• Translation of future research into
actionable protocols for Behavioral Safety
Psychological Obstacles to a
World-Class Safety System
• The Fundamental
Attribution Error
• Cognitive Dissonance
• Complacency
• Laziness
• Outcome Bias
• Local Rationality
• Fact/Value Confusion
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Overconfidence Effect
Recency Effect
Redundancy
Rosy Retrospective
Sample Bias
Selective Perception
Status Quo Bias
Sunk Cost Effects
Wishful Thinking
Where to get more information
• Behavior Safety Now Conferece
Reno, NV October 9-11, 2013
• RCI Safety BBS Academy, Council Bluffs, IA
• The Ameristar Casino August 6 & 7, 2013
• Bringing Out the Best in People (Aubrey Daniels)
• Leading with Safety (Thomas Krause)
• Leading People-Based Safety: Enriching Your
Culture (Scott Geller)
• Values Based Safety (Terry McSween)
• Behavioral Safety: A Framework for Success
(Cooper)