Improving Remedial Measures from Incident Investigations: A Study Across Ghanaian Mines
Background: Learning from incidents for accident prevention is a two-stage process, involving the investigation of past accidents to identify the causal factors, followed by the identification and implementation of remedial measures to address the identified causal factors. The focus of past researc...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Elsevier
2024-03-01
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Series: | Safety and Health at Work |
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Online Access: | http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791123000811 |
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author | Theophilus Joe-Asare Eric Stemn |
author_facet | Theophilus Joe-Asare Eric Stemn |
author_sort | Theophilus Joe-Asare |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Background: Learning from incidents for accident prevention is a two-stage process, involving the investigation of past accidents to identify the causal factors, followed by the identification and implementation of remedial measures to address the identified causal factors. The focus of past research has been on the identification of causal factors, with limited focus on the identification and implementation of remedial measures. This research begins to contribute to this gap. The motivation for the research is twofold. First, previous analyses show the recurring nature of accidents within the Ghanaian mining industry, and the causal factors also remain the same. This raises questions on the nature and effectiveness of remedial measures identified to address the causes of past accidents. Secondly, without identifying and implementing remedial measures, the full benefits of accident investigations will not be achieved. Hence, this study aims to assess the nature of remedial measures proposed to address investigation causal factors. Method: The study adopted SMARTER from business studies with the addition of HMW (H – Hierarchical, M – Mapping, and W – Weighting of causal factors) to analyse the recommendations from 500 individual investigation reports across seven different mines in Ghana. Results: The individual and the work environment (79%) were mostly the focused during the search for causes, with limited focus on organisational factors (21%). Forty eight percentage of the recommendations were administrative, focussing on fixing the problem in the immediate affected area or department of the victim(s). Most recommendations (70.4%) were support activities that only enhance the effectiveness of control but do not prevent/mitigate the failure directly. Across all the mines, there was no focus on evaluating the performance of remedial measures after their implementation. Conclusion: Identifying sharp-end causes leads to proposing weak recommendations which fail to address latent organisational conditions. The study proposed a guide for effective planning and implementation of remedial actions. |
first_indexed | 2024-04-25T00:15:27Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-0cde790cf64846a48513e21dd3e9bf62 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2093-7911 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-04-25T00:15:27Z |
publishDate | 2024-03-01 |
publisher | Elsevier |
record_format | Article |
series | Safety and Health at Work |
spelling | doaj.art-0cde790cf64846a48513e21dd3e9bf622024-03-13T04:45:18ZengElsevierSafety and Health at Work2093-79112024-03-011512432Improving Remedial Measures from Incident Investigations: A Study Across Ghanaian MinesTheophilus Joe-Asare0Eric Stemn1Corresponding author. Environmental and Safety Engineering Department, University of Mines and Technology, Box 237, Tarkwa, Ghana.; Environmental and Safety Engineering Department, University of Mines and Technology, Box 237, Tarkwa, GhanaEnvironmental and Safety Engineering Department, University of Mines and Technology, Box 237, Tarkwa, GhanaBackground: Learning from incidents for accident prevention is a two-stage process, involving the investigation of past accidents to identify the causal factors, followed by the identification and implementation of remedial measures to address the identified causal factors. The focus of past research has been on the identification of causal factors, with limited focus on the identification and implementation of remedial measures. This research begins to contribute to this gap. The motivation for the research is twofold. First, previous analyses show the recurring nature of accidents within the Ghanaian mining industry, and the causal factors also remain the same. This raises questions on the nature and effectiveness of remedial measures identified to address the causes of past accidents. Secondly, without identifying and implementing remedial measures, the full benefits of accident investigations will not be achieved. Hence, this study aims to assess the nature of remedial measures proposed to address investigation causal factors. Method: The study adopted SMARTER from business studies with the addition of HMW (H – Hierarchical, M – Mapping, and W – Weighting of causal factors) to analyse the recommendations from 500 individual investigation reports across seven different mines in Ghana. Results: The individual and the work environment (79%) were mostly the focused during the search for causes, with limited focus on organisational factors (21%). Forty eight percentage of the recommendations were administrative, focussing on fixing the problem in the immediate affected area or department of the victim(s). Most recommendations (70.4%) were support activities that only enhance the effectiveness of control but do not prevent/mitigate the failure directly. Across all the mines, there was no focus on evaluating the performance of remedial measures after their implementation. Conclusion: Identifying sharp-end causes leads to proposing weak recommendations which fail to address latent organisational conditions. The study proposed a guide for effective planning and implementation of remedial actions.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791123000811Accident preventionRemedial measuresSMARTER |
spellingShingle | Theophilus Joe-Asare Eric Stemn Improving Remedial Measures from Incident Investigations: A Study Across Ghanaian Mines Safety and Health at Work Accident prevention Remedial measures SMARTER |
title | Improving Remedial Measures from Incident Investigations: A Study Across Ghanaian Mines |
title_full | Improving Remedial Measures from Incident Investigations: A Study Across Ghanaian Mines |
title_fullStr | Improving Remedial Measures from Incident Investigations: A Study Across Ghanaian Mines |
title_full_unstemmed | Improving Remedial Measures from Incident Investigations: A Study Across Ghanaian Mines |
title_short | Improving Remedial Measures from Incident Investigations: A Study Across Ghanaian Mines |
title_sort | improving remedial measures from incident investigations a study across ghanaian mines |
topic | Accident prevention Remedial measures SMARTER |
url | http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791123000811 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT theophilusjoeasare improvingremedialmeasuresfromincidentinvestigationsastudyacrossghanaianmines AT ericstemn improvingremedialmeasuresfromincidentinvestigationsastudyacrossghanaianmines |