Posted By Merv Newman
Behavioural safety used to be likened to the unwed mother likely to be kicked out into the snow by an irate father.
Good to see it getting serious discussion and the depth of knowledge shown by respondents is also pretty good.
However, you all seem to be talking about the same style of BBS programme : Safe behaviours being defined by a steering group (with management participation, Observations made by managers or supervisors, results calculated on some statistical basis, 3 or more days training ...)
A different style of BBS programme involves the employees in defining the behaviours (15 to start, cut to 10 after base lining), management and then represent ants of involved work groups receive a half day training (including ABC and the four reinforcers/weakeners) A member of the work group, who will be the observer, 10 to 15 minutes per day, receives a little bit of extra training (half hour)
The observation scores are "binary" : "Yes, everyone observed behaved correctly today" = 1 or "No, at least one person observed today did not behave correctly" = 0
The third possibility is "X" meaning no example of a specified behaviour, safe or unsafe, was observed today. Example : defined safe behaviour is holding the handrail on stairs. If no-one uses the stairs during the observation period then the score is "X" and is not included in today's score.
The result for today is a simple percentage of "yes's" against the total number of behaviours observed.
And the global score for the week is again a simple percentage.
This kind of programme is designed to be administratively light and simple to run, with a maximum of employee involvement and ownership. The observer does most of the work with support from supervision and management.
Supervision and management are mostly involved in the "recognition, reward and reinforcement" areas.
So, to answer Paul's question : Our form has a list of the 10 safe behaviours on the left. Then there are six columns for the days of the week. Each column is divided into three for the three possible results for each behaviour : "yes", "no" or "not seen"
A final column, to the right, gives percentage scores for each behaviour and a global percentage for the week.
Paul, if you e-mail to the above address I can send you an example.
And, as you say, BBS is the third thing to do :
1 (or 2) Get your work environment as safe as reasonably practical.
2 (or 1) Get your safety management system working (which includes all that lovely legal stuff)
3 Then do BBS.
BBS is no substitute for a safe working environment and a good system of safety management. It is an add-on, but when you really want a top-down AND a bottom-up safety culture, you gotta do it.
Merv