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Human Factor Analysis

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Title: Human Factor Analysis


1
Human Factor Analysis
Kathleen Ryan Associate Director, Quality
Safety Branch
2
HUMAN FACTORS ANALYSIS AND CLASSIFICATION
SYSTEM(HFACS)
The First Step in Risk Management Process
3
A Busy Emergency Department A scenario
ED Beds full Work Overload
Trauma Pt arrives in an Ambulance
ED Reception Communication overflow
MET CALL
Staff called in sick- Agency staff on duty to
backfill Resource crunch
Pt having a cardiac arrest- MET team paged Staff
under work pressure
Visiting Locums Staff not aware of access to
policies and procedures
4
Background
  • Based on the theory of human error developed by
    James Reason (1990).
  • Human factors analysis is a discipline of risk
    management directed at understanding and
    controlling medical device use error.
  • Active failures are the actions or inactions of
    operators that are believed to cause the mishap.
    Traditionally referred to as error, they are
    the last acts committed by individuals, often
    with immediate and tragic consequences.(Reason-199
    0).

5
Background- Contd
  • Drawing upon Reasons (1990) and Weighmann and
    Shappells (2003) concept of active failures and
    latent failures/conditions, a new Department of
    Defence (DoD) taxonomy was developed to identify
    hazards and risks called DoD Human Factors and
    Classification System.
  • DoD-HFACS describes four main tiers of
    failures/conditions
  • Acts
  • Preconditions
  • Supervision and
  • Organisational Influences

6
(No Transcript)
7
Key Points
  • Two approaches to the problem of human
    fallibility exist the person and the system
    approaches
  • The person approach focuses on the errors of
    individuals, blaming them for forgetfulness,
    inattention, or moral weakness
  • The system approach concentrates on the
    conditions under which individuals work and tries
    to build defences to avert errors or mitigate
    their effects

8
What are the benefits?
  • Reduced potential for human error and its
    consequences
  • Root cause human factors in incident
    investigation
  • Fewer accidents
  • Fewer near misses
  • Management of organisational change, and safety
    critical communications
  • A more productive workforce

9
Rules Violation
  • Goal conflict and procedural deviance
  • Divergence from written guidelines in a need to
    pursue multiple goals goal conflict.
  • Contradictory goals are the rule, not the
    exception in complex situations Sidney
    DekkerSurgical waiting list and ED access
    targets V Safety targets
  • Rewards what gets rewarded
  • Activity or Safety Targets??

10
Working towards safety
  • Organisations who wish to make progress on safety
    with procedures need to
  • Monitor the gap between procedure and practice
    and try to understand why it exists ( and resist
    trying to close it simply telling people to
    comply)
  • Help people develop skills to judge when and how
    to adapt ( and resist only telling people they
    should follow procedures).

11
  • A key to success is integrating human factors
    into existing systems and processes, not trying
    to work it as a stand-alone independent effort.

12
Human beings by their very nature make mistakes
therefore, it is unreasonable to expect
error-free human performance. Shappell
Wiegmann, 1997
13
What does this mean for the Policy Implementation
Review Group?
  • Discussion.
  • http//www.health.nsw.gov.au/quality/pirg/index.ht
    ml
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