I Got An Ouchee

I Got An Ouchee

How much do you know about your workforce’s minor injuries? What is your reporting culture around minor injuries? What percentage of minor injuries do you know about? Some of these minor injuries are above the waterline. This could be the case if a worker suffers a cut and seeks first aid and it gets recorded or a manager witnesses the minor injury. You can also see some of the iceberg right below the waterline, although it may be distorted. Here we may learn about a minor injury sometime after the fact or learn about one through the grapevine.??

Unfortunately, many minor injuries are not reported. Why? Let’s say you are loosening a flange with a wrench and the wrench slips. You bang your elbow pretty good causing a nice bruise. Whatta you gonna do? Go to your supervisor and say “I got an ouchee”? These are rough jobs worked by tough people who might find it embarrassing to make a big deal out of something minor. Maybe these types of bangs and bumps are just considered part of the job and not something to report. Bottom line, you’re worried that if you tell people that you slipped and banged up your arm on the job you’ll earn the label “stupid” or clumsy.

It’s possible that you used a cheater bar to get more leverage from your wrench on the flange bolt. The rules are pretty clear against cheater bars but the tool crib is way over at the loading dock and you and your buddies hid some metal tubing just for this purpose. So you bent the rules (and probably the tubing) when you got your bruise. You gonna tell your boss about this? Probably not.

There are other reasons why you may not report a minor injury. What happened the last time you reported an injury? What was your experience? If you had to be taken off the job and go to the principal’s office to fill out a long form I bet you wouldn’t find it rewarding. You didn’t take this job to be a writer and this form asks a lot of questions that take a lot of words… some of which you’d rather not write because it’s embarrassing. Then when you’re all done you have to assign the incident to a root cause and the top choice on the list to choose from is… “stupid.”

We have to acknowledge that sometimes a minor injury may be reported but not recorded. Perhaps because it might embarrass the person you report to (who didn’t get the new tool you had requested). And recording a minor injury could hurt their numbers. Minor injuries, or first aids, are typically tracked for the trending that can lead to proactive actions to avert a larger incident. But showing an increase in first aids in your unit can lead to unwanted scrutiny by the safety police or upper management. So best to keep those numbers down.

This fact hit home when I visited a refinery where I was kindly given a tour. The refinery had an excellent safety program overall. My guide was doing a good job looking out for our safety. Beyond the usual orientation and PPE, he frequently alerted us to hazards as we walked through the plant; many times we were walking single file so it was incumbent on the rest of us to point to the hazard as well to deliver the information down the line. He pointed to one protruding plate of metal about head level. I remember pointing it out as well. Perhaps I touched the metal itself, perhaps it had some chemical residue, perhaps my safety gloves were clipped to my belt, perhaps later in the day I scratched my ear? Who knows? But after I got back to the hotel I found some type of chemical burn behind the lobe of my ear and down my neck. I debated for a day whether to report it to the refinery or not.??

I hesitated to report this minor burn because I was the safety expert coming to the plant to do an assessment and offer suggestions.??It would be embarrassing for me. So it took a couple days to send an email to the safety pro at the plant reporting my small burn and letting him know that it had cleared up. I was willing to complete any minor injury form they required. The email back was surprising. He suggested that I potentially got the rash from another source before arriving at the refinery and there would be no need to report a minor injury. No form. No record. Below the water line.

But don’t we want our employees, work team leaders, contractors, and, um, guests to report when they suffer a minor injury? It’s true that most incidents don’t need to be reported to regulators, but it’s also true that reporting can protect both the employee and company’s interests if the injury turns out to be worse than expected.

The main reason to encourage our workforces to track minor injuries is to be able to collect the data and learn from it. We can study the data and even use analytics to determine trends that suggest the potential for more severe injuries. Uncovering trends allows us to proactively fix hazards and reduce risk-taking before the more severe injuries raise their ugly head.

We can even learn from the individual minor injury by learning about the situation the worker was in and the behaviors that put the worker at-risk. From this context we can analyze the behaviors to come up with actionable solutions.


Want to see what else Tim has up his sleeve?

Purchase The Science and Best Practices of Behavioral Safety

Purchase Dysfunctional Practices

Appalachiansafetysummit.com

Safety-Doc.com

Norman Umberger

Improvement Guru. I help organizations become better & make the world better. Lifelong Learner. Always learning about my expertise, my community, my professional partners, & our world. Let’s make our world better.

10 个月

Could chasing minor injuries, the ones with little chance of being major injuries, be wasting valuable resources? In a wood products facility, some wanted every splinter investigated. Wood has splinters, people get splinters, almost all splinters are very minor injuries (esp if removed), there is no way to not have splinters on wood or in people, yes, splinters could kill you, but is highly unlikely, and so on. I would have walked the path again and try to see if I could find a loose chemical. And remind folks of the purpose and proper use of PPE. And I would not blow you off nor suggest the injury might have occurred elsewhere even though that is a distinct possibility.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Tim Ludwig的更多文章

  • T.H.A.N.K.S. for the Feedback

    T.H.A.N.K.S. for the Feedback

    View my 9th Annual Appalachian Safety Summit presentation here: We’ve designed a T.H.

    1 条评论
  • Align for the Front Line

    Align for the Front Line

    View my 8th Annual Appalachian Safety Summit presentation here: By the time workers find themselves in a position to…

  • Words that Don't Matter Don't Help

    Words that Don't Matter Don't Help

    View my 10th Annual Appalachian Safety Summit presentation here: I hear you out there, I’ve heard you and, especially…

    1 条评论
  • Final Call for Registration

    Final Call for Registration

    The 10th Annual Appalachian Safety Summit is nearly upon us! Registration for those attending in person individually or…

  • Registration Closes Aug. 24

    Registration Closes Aug. 24

    The 10th Annual Appalachian Safety Summit is nearly upon us, which means it's time to start locking in! We have…

  • Safety Summit Conference Agenda

    Safety Summit Conference Agenda

    Tuesday, September 3, 2024 7:30 am – 8:15 am Registration and Coffee 8:15 am – 8:30 am Welcome – TBD Safety Briefing –…

    1 条评论
  • MTS: John Michael Simmons

    MTS: John Michael Simmons

    Safety professionals are heroes but even heroes are faced with life events that can knock them down. However, I’ve…

    2 条评论
  • MTS: (Ret) Rear Admiral John Meier

    MTS: (Ret) Rear Admiral John Meier

    “I was barely starting grad school back in 1988 when John Meier became a Naval Aviator flying missions for our country…

  • We are Dopamine addicts – REBAR OF NEUROLOGY

    We are Dopamine addicts – REBAR OF NEUROLOGY

    To understand the fundamental importance of reinforcement in our lives, I gotta drop some more neurology on you… so…

    4 条评论
  • 10th Annual Safety Summit Registration Open!

    10th Annual Safety Summit Registration Open!

    Good morning, Safety Friends! We are excited to announce that registration is open for the 10th Annual Appalachian…

    1 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了