Sorry to both (and all), I obviously wrote that in a way which could be misconstrued. The main point I was trying to make is that we (as a society) enable (by continuing to buy them) the MSM to report all sorts of sensationalised claptrap which gets in the way of the public being informed on serious issues, and our governing and overseeing bodies are either happy to let them or are unwilling or unable to do anything about it.
What is the main jibe thrown at H&S moves when they are implemented? "Here we go again, interfering. Haven't they got anything better to do?". IMHO that attitude comes partly, maybe even mainly, from failing to understand why the measures are being taken, and partly by making disproportionate recommendations and implementing disproportionate controls (Warning: Danger of falling coffee cups!) which just feeds the press the fodder they need.
Overwhelmingly, the intention of the H&S person is to do good, save lives, reduce injuries, but sometimes it is a poorly judged attempt to observe compliance (that's why I favour a risk-based approach.) It is rarely if ever to reduce productivity or make a job harder, though sometimes it does make the job more difficult (like working in obstructive PPE) and the workforce often resist and go on to do something inadvisable, maybe reverting to previous practice because it was easier. In that example, the person has their reason for doing the thing. It may not be a sensible reason, but it is the driving force for what they did and that was my other point. Surely a big part of our job is to get over the message that it is in the workers best interest to follow the control measures, and finding the motivation is the key to that. That's the hard sell.
"Ironic when it takes no thought at all to realise the risks taken are only ever going to benefit the employer, not the worker. - me"
"Some shortcuts are taken by employees either not for the benefit of the employer or not for anyone's benefit - Achrn"
You are right to correct me, I worded that badly. I meant if it goes well and no-one is hurt, then the employer benefits through increased productivity, and the employee often stays on the right side of the boss. (it is important to stress here that I was considering that portion of accidents which are preventable, I accept there are always going to be some workers who will consistently do the wrong thing no matter how hard we try to stop them, but are they in the right job in that case, and is that a management failure?
True, the results of the shortcut if it goes badly are not to anyone's benefit, but the motivation, the reason for not following the control measure is often to make the job easier or quicker or more pleasant for the worker. When it goes well that may or may not benefit the worker depending on how well they are managed but we all know the cry of commerce: quicker, faster, cheaper, more profit. So the employer directly benefits (granted possibly alongside the employee). We mustn't confuse the intended benefit with the outcome, they can and often are completely different in my view.
"Are you honestly claiming that no worker ever has ever cut corners just because they didn't want to do something, none has ever done something stupid? Overstating your case by suggesting that all worker injuries are entirely the fault of management who only ever make decisions to increase profit does not help your argument, especially when you are trying to engage management in that discussion. Achrn"
I did not say that. I said: "If someone is fatally injured either because they were not aware of the hazards through training or experience, or poor maintenance, or were rushing, under pressure, the task was just too risky, or some other management failure, then that to me is the biggest crime of all because the motivation for ignoring the risks to the worker is always the same: the company's financial benefit." That is true, in those cases.
" Our road traffic fatalities and injuries are higher than the at-work figures (about ten times as many fatalities). There's no widespread public outrage at those either. Those needless pointless deaths aren't in the headlines.- Achrn" My point exactly. And domestic abuse and others. We don't even get public safety information films anymore. What is the govt doing about it and why are we not up in arms about it? If it were gun crime we'd be having a civil war. Sorry if I was unclear.
"I could conclude from the paper (which I note is an opinion piece, not a study or academic paper) that it's a demonstration that Heinrich's triangle (or rather, the normal naive interpretation) is not true. So the 'H&S' industry was wrong? Does that mean management is right to treat the 'professional' advice of H&S practitioners with some scepticism? - Achrn" Yes! I agree wholeheartedly. I once did a critical analysis of Heinrich's triangle and came to the same conclusion. I don't believe in it, but I don't think I argued differently did I?
"It is telling, that twice a year (provisional release and official confirmation) the HSE fatality stats are reported & commented on by the MSM. The HSE does not help by just focusing on the fatalities and its selective approach to presenting the data. It never appears to highlight the number of major specified injuries. Thus, an opportunity to present the scale of the problem is missed.- hoosier" - True, but can I add I was trying to make the point (ineffectively) that stats are not sexy to the general population, stories are. Maybe if more reporting went on about the accidents and how they affected the person they would have more impact. Most don't get reported beyond a local rag.
"If we also accept ACHRNs potential conclusion that a certain level of serious injuries & fatalities is inevitable, then we might as well all pack up and go home, or find a different career. - hoosier" I don't agree that a certain level is inevitable, not at all. I do however think that there are certain irresponsible individuals that are in the wrong positions and it is only a matter of time before they get hurt through their own actions regardless of how much we try to coach them, and those persons should be removed for their own protection. Ultimately that is a management failing, but only if an incident does not remove them first!
Sorry if I made the wrong impression.
Edited by user 23 July 2019 07:54:37(UTC)
| Reason: lost formatting