Behavior Based Safety
Behavior Based Safety
Behavior-Based Safety
OSTN 2000-2005.. All rights reserved. This material, or any other material used to inform employers of compliance requirements of OSHA standards through simplification of the regulations should not be considered a substitute for any provisions of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 or for any standards issued by OSHA. The information in this publication is intended for training purposes only.
Business is Behavior
Behavior - According to E. Scott Geller, behavior refers to acts or actions by individuals that can be observed by others. In other words, behavior is what a person does or says, as opposed to what he or she thinks, feels, or believes. A dead man cant do it Must be observable, measurable Any time, any where, any body
Consequence - According to Aubrey Daniels, a consequence is simply what happens to the performer as a result of the behavior. A consequence can be: Positive or negative. Does the consequence help or hurt from the performers point of view? Immediate or future. When will the consequence occur? Certain or uncertain. Whats the probability that the performer will experience the consequence?
Consequences that decrease behavior Punishment - Intent is to stop undesired behavior. You get something you dont want when you
misbehave. Punishment does not predict what the replacement behavior will be. It is usually unintentional. You get something you dont want when you misbehave. Does not predict what the replacement behavior will be. Is usually unintentional in organizations If you engage in horseplay, you will be suspended from work.
Sure- employees know (1) they will be recognized, and (2) why theyre being
recognized. Guess I was just lucky. Does the BBS plan specify precisely what must be done to get the award? Do employees generally understand whats required to get recognized? When asked what it takes to earn the reward, do most reply with I dont really know? Does the BBS plan limit the number of rewards any one person can receive during a given period? If the reward is always given to the best employee, the same person may receive the reward most of the time. Does the BBS plan allow a pass-around reward? When this occurs, the reward is not contingent on behavior.
Sincere - genuine appreciation or disapproval. You really mean it. Motives for
recognizing are not questioned. Recognize in public, reprimand in private! Any problems with this principle? Is recognition given as a matter of policy or genuine appreciation? Is the purpose of the recognition to make management, or the employee look good?
Thomas Krause - BST ABC Steps in the Behavioral Safety Process The Safety Improvement Process:
1. Identify critical problem behaviors. These become action items to work on. 2. Identify root causes. The basic things that need to be fixed to eliminate the problem. 3. Generate potential actions. Think of as many solutions as possible. 4. Evaluate possible actions. Choose those that are most productive. 5. Develop an action plan. To carry out the chosen solutions. 6. Implement an action plan. Carry it the change. Limit variables. 7. Conduct follow up. Problem solved? Measure and evaluate.
Duponts Safety Training Observation Program (STOP) STOP for Supervisors. A comprehensive training program that teaches managers,
supervisors, and team leaders how to become more skilled observers of unsafe acts, to take action to prevent their recurrence, and to encourage safe work practices.
STOP for Employees. Teaches employees how to observe and audit themselves to prevent
injuries and improve safety performance.
STOP Audits. Employee self-audits (independence) and observation and feedback to peers
(interdependence). ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________
People tend to become what the most important people in their lives think they will become.
OSTN Introduction to Behavior-Based Safety
According to Michael D. Topf, there are nine common obstacles to cultural change: 1. Management has assumed responsibility for safety and supervisors play the role of safety cops. Safety in such workplaces is perceived as a negative. 2. The safety message is not getting out because downsizing has reduced the number of individuals available to communicate it. Meanwhile, production demands are on the rise increasing pressure to cut corners. 3. The press of meetings and other administrative tasks means less time for supervisors to spend on safety training and reinforcement. 4. Supervisors are often poor role models, taking shortcuts themselves and failing to follow company and OSHA rules. 5. Supervisors ask employees to take risks, either implicitly or explicitly. 6. Supervisors condone or overlook risk-taking behavior until an injury occurs, and then they counter it with discipline. 7. Line employees hold on to tenacious, counterproductive beliefs such as: Accidents dont happen to me. 8. There is a lack of trust between labor and management; unresolved conflicts erode trust and communication. 9. Fear of job loss is prevalent and negatively impacts morale and job performance. Each of these nine obstacles, once accepted by a majority of the organization, becomes part of the collection of beliefs and day to day behaviors that constitutes the organizations culture. Core beliefs that influence culture on the personal and organizational level. All injuries are preventable. All employees are responsible for their safety and the safety of their co-workers Management is ultimately responsible for the safety of all employees. Working safely is a condition of employment. All risks will be identified, addressed, and managed. Educating and training employees to work safely is essential. Preventing injuries is good business - a profit center activity. Safety, production, cost, and quality depend on each other. Safety will never be compromised for production or convenience. Every employee has the obligation to shut down an unsafe operation. The continuing health and wellness of each employee is vital to our long-term success.
OSTN Introduction to Behavior-Based Safety
E. Scott Geller: Safety Performance Solutions (SPS) - Total Safety Culture An actively caring Total Safety Culture requires continual attention in three domains.
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Pe r
Equipment, tools, machinery housekeeping, temperature, engineering, standards Operating procedures, rules
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Behavior
Behavior Factors Complying, reporting, coaching, recognizing, communicating, actively caring
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Gellers Do-It Process Define critical behavior(s) to increase or decrease Observe target observable behaviors during the pre-intervention phase to determine baselines,
set goals, understand influences on target behaviors.
Intervene to change the target behavior(s) in desired directions. Test the impact of the intervention procedures by continuing to observe and record the target
behavior(s) during the intervention program.
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Whats the difference between a tough controlling culture and a tough caring culture?
_________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ 3. To modify behavior through the systematic use of reinforcement following behavior to influence future behavior.
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3. A system of measurement
Measurement = Observation + quantification Criteria. Performance evaluated against established criteria. Formal observation and feedback
4. Effective consequences
Soon - Certain - Significant - Sincere Must increase desired behaviors.
5. Appropriate application
Selection criteria. How are employees selected for recognition and reward? Presentation. How is recognition presented? Who what where how when? Fairness. Consistently applied laterally, vertically
Not knowing why things get better or worse is always a problem for a business. If it gets better for no reason, later it will Not knowing why things get better or worse is always a problem for a business. If it gets better for no reason, later it will probably get worse for no reason. The point is, its not enough to know that something works. It is vitally important to probably get worse for no reason. The point is, its not enough to know that something works. It is vitally important to know why it works. (Aubrey Daniels, Bringing Out The Best in People, p. 14) know why it works. (Aubrey Daniels, Bringing Out The Best in People, p. 14)
OSTN Introduction to Behavior-Based Safety
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