I’m a great fan of using technology to our advantage, however what I’m not great fan of is a reliance on technology to tell us when something is wrong.
As Health & Safety Professionals we look at risk, hazards and the potential for harm. You could argue that the amount of children in left car compared to how many car users with children there are, is in fact a low risk and calling for need to install alarms in all cars is not practicable? I don’t have all the data at hand to make that judgement call.
In work, should we identify the need for alarms on systems to identify an issue we will carry out training, checks so people don’t just rely on the alarms and testing of the system to make sure its effective. Part of that training and checks will be making sure it can’t be switched or circumvented. Part of the duty of care and supervision.
In the real world none of this will take place. No one pays any attention to car alarms, how many people will plug the seat belt in when carrying a load on a seat to stop the alarm going off or turn the alarm off due to a dog on the seat (which you can leave in the car, but that’s a different story in the summer).
Any system will have the option to turn it off for the reason above. So what happens when one person’s turns the alarm off, the second person gets in the car and isn’t aware. But what about a warning message I hear you cry. If you have a new car with fancy screens it pings up loads of warning messages, which trust me you will ignore and just ‘OK’ very quickly.
So now you have a situation where a parent is relying on the car to tell them they have left the children in the back and if they system has failed or been switched off, what then? Whose fault is that?
Going back to us safety professionals what would you write into a Risk Assessment or SSOW with something fitted with a warning alarm? Would you tell people to just wait for the alarm to sound to tell you there is an issue or would you teach people to always carry out an all-around check, to test the alarm to check it is working and to never rely on the alarm?
No one wants to see another child die due to being left in a car, but is putting in an alarm the best course of action. A parent could leave their child behind in a shopping centre or park, do we then fit all children with a proximity alarm. I don’t know the answer, but I know that every time I get in and out of a car I check the backseats regardless if I have my kids with me or not, I got into the habit of doing so to the point it’s now become the norm. I check my tyre pressure and oil levels without waiting for the car to tell me too and once my kids are older I will teach them the same.
There is a risk of putting in an automated system to solve all our problems in life, but what happens when that system fails?