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#1 Posted : 14 September 2009 13:28:00(UTC)
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Posted By Andrew Cartridge How do I calculate an FWI (Fatality Weighted Injury Index) as I am certainly no mathematician, any help & advice would be very much appreciated. Regards Andy
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#2 Posted : 14 September 2009 16:29:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ian G Hutchings Andrew I think the weighting is dependent on industry/situation. For example value of life (or equivalent injury rate) calculation is higher for rail passengers than road/car users. There may be more detail in the Rail Safety and Standards Board www.rssb.co.uk website in the annual safety reports. Afraid I can't help with the maths side. Best wishes Ian
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#3 Posted : 15 September 2009 08:28:00(UTC)
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Posted By Raymond Rapp Andrew Agree with previous posting in that the 'weighting' or CBA, is dependant on the value of life within that sector or company. For example, some years ago the railway company I worked for valued a passenger life at £1M and an employees' life at £100K! The whole process is more subjective than it is objective in my opinion. Hence it is not really any real worth, unless of course you are a numbers geek with few morals. Ray
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#4 Posted : 15 September 2009 12:14:00(UTC)
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Posted By IOSH Moderator Point of order. The mathematics are merely a tool to inform the morality of the situation. Similarly the mathematicians are the technicians utilising those tools. Neither the numbers or the technicians have "few morals". Carry on. Jon
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#5 Posted : 15 September 2009 12:26:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ian G Hutchings The value of life is simply a method for identifying the priority of investment from government. This is based on public risk perception and acceptance of control in certain circumstances. Best wishes Ian
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#6 Posted : 15 September 2009 13:03:00(UTC)
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Posted By Andrew Cartridge Ray Steady on, remember your blood pressure ;-) I have now been informed that: Fatalities and weighted injuries (FWI) 1 FWI = •1 fatality •10 major injuries •200 minor injuries Thanks Andy
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#7 Posted : 15 September 2009 13:26:00(UTC)
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Posted By Raymond Rapp My 'morals' comment was tongue in cheek and not specifically aimed at any individual. Did it really warrant a 'point of order' comment?
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#8 Posted : 15 September 2009 13:34:00(UTC)
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Posted By Descarte I read the point of order comment as also tongue in cheek
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#9 Posted : 15 September 2009 16:05:00(UTC)
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Posted By Andrew Cartridge Ray As the originator of the thread, I certainly took no offence. Jon why did you jump in so quickly? Regards Andy
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#10 Posted : 16 September 2009 16:00:00(UTC)
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Posted By Jim Walker I thought Ray's comment was quite reasonable ( he did express it as an opinion) as was Jon's. I think Jon was wrong to have had his Moderator's hat on at the time.
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#11 Posted : 17 September 2009 08:53:00(UTC)
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Posted By Raymond Rapp Andy/Jim In fairness to Jon, he sent me an email politely explaining the decision. I still can't see the rationale behind Jon's comments, but at least he made an effort. No offence taken. Ray
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