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Ep.85 Why does safety get harder as systems get safer?

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Manage episode 308176907 series 2571262
Content provided by David Provan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by David Provan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Find out our thoughts on this paper and our key takeaways for the ever-changing world of workplace safety.

Topics:

  • Introduction to the paper & the Author
  • “Adding more rules is not going to make your system safer.”
  • The principles of safety in the paper
  • Types of safety systems as broken down by the paper
  • Problems in these “Ultrasafe systems”
  • The Summary of developments of human error
  • The psychology of making mistakes
  • The Efficiency trade-off element in safety
  • Suggestions in Amalberti’s conclusion
  • Takeaway messages
  • Answering the question: Why does safety get harder as systems get safer?

Quotes:

“Systems are good - but they are bad because humans make mistakes” - Dr. Drew Rae

“He doesn’t believe that zero is the optimal number of human errors” - Dr. Drew Rae

“You can’t look at mistakes in isolation of the context” - Dr. Drew Rae

“The context and the system drive the behavior. - Dr. David Provan

“It’s part of the human condition to accept mistakes. It is actually an important part of the way we learn and develop our understanding of things. - Dr. David Provan

Resources:

Griffith University Safety Science Innovation Lab

The Safety of Work Podcast

The Safety of Work LinkedIn

Feedback@safetyofwork.com

The Paradoxes of Almost Totally Safe Transportation Systems by R. Amalberti

Risk Management in a Dynamic society: a Modeling problem - Jens Rasmussen

The ETTO Principle: Efficiency-Thoroughness Trade-Off: Why Things That Go Right Sometimes Go Wrong - Book by Erik Hollnagel

Ep.81 How does simulation training develop Safety II capabilities?

Navigating safety: Necessary Compromises and Trade-Offs - Theory and Practice - Book by R. Amalberti

  continue reading

117 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 308176907 series 2571262
Content provided by David Provan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by David Provan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Find out our thoughts on this paper and our key takeaways for the ever-changing world of workplace safety.

Topics:

  • Introduction to the paper & the Author
  • “Adding more rules is not going to make your system safer.”
  • The principles of safety in the paper
  • Types of safety systems as broken down by the paper
  • Problems in these “Ultrasafe systems”
  • The Summary of developments of human error
  • The psychology of making mistakes
  • The Efficiency trade-off element in safety
  • Suggestions in Amalberti’s conclusion
  • Takeaway messages
  • Answering the question: Why does safety get harder as systems get safer?

Quotes:

“Systems are good - but they are bad because humans make mistakes” - Dr. Drew Rae

“He doesn’t believe that zero is the optimal number of human errors” - Dr. Drew Rae

“You can’t look at mistakes in isolation of the context” - Dr. Drew Rae

“The context and the system drive the behavior. - Dr. David Provan

“It’s part of the human condition to accept mistakes. It is actually an important part of the way we learn and develop our understanding of things. - Dr. David Provan

Resources:

Griffith University Safety Science Innovation Lab

The Safety of Work Podcast

The Safety of Work LinkedIn

Feedback@safetyofwork.com

The Paradoxes of Almost Totally Safe Transportation Systems by R. Amalberti

Risk Management in a Dynamic society: a Modeling problem - Jens Rasmussen

The ETTO Principle: Efficiency-Thoroughness Trade-Off: Why Things That Go Right Sometimes Go Wrong - Book by Erik Hollnagel

Ep.81 How does simulation training develop Safety II capabilities?

Navigating safety: Necessary Compromises and Trade-Offs - Theory and Practice - Book by R. Amalberti

  continue reading

117 episodes

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