Psychological safety and patient safety: A systematic and narrative review

This explored the links between psychological safety and objective patient safety outcomes: ·        “No clear conclusions can be extracted regarding the relationship between psychological safety and patient safety” ·        “The evidence linking psychological and patient safety is equivocal” ·        “Overall, there is relatively little hard data to link PS and patient safety outcomes” ·        “Only nine studies fit the… Continue reading Psychological safety and patient safety: A systematic and narrative review

Role overload and safety incidents: An examination of the individual- and team-level buffering effects of psychological safety

This study evaluated the how psychological safety can buffer the effects of role overload on safety incidents. Data was from 841 employees across 100 teams in a large Australian health service. Extracts: ·        The analysis revealed that “role overload positively relates to safety incidents” ·        Role overload is defined as quantitative role overload, occuring “when an individual… Continue reading Role overload and safety incidents: An examination of the individual- and team-level buffering effects of psychological safety

The links between hazard energy and injury severity and the 1,500 J SIF threshold: Energy-Based Safety

Further extracts from Energy-Based Safety: ·        “We only Identify about 45% of the Hazards during our Work Planning” ·        “The crews from these industry-leading companies were identifying fewer than half of the hazards” ·        “Hazard Recognition Skills are the Same Regardless of Age, Experience Or other Personal Factors” ·        “We assumed seasoned workers would identify more hazards than their… Continue reading The links between hazard energy and injury severity and the 1,500 J SIF threshold: Energy-Based Safety

Safe As E48: Blame fixes … something ???

Does blame really fix nothing, or does it actually have some redeeming features? Make sure to subscribe to Safe As on Spotify/Apple, and if you find it useful then please help share the news, and leave a rating and review on your podcast app. Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/7jwmonRiJyneJgUMp7NGxg?si=maKV88GrQFmEgp6M9Nqfhw I also have a Safe As LinkedIn group if… Continue reading Safe As E48: Blame fixes … something ???

Safety Theatre: How success can mask growing safety risks

Extracts from Sid Dekker’s recent article on ‘Safety Theatre’ ·         “Is it risky to be safe? … [evidence shows] that fatalities can hide in the green: the fewer incidents or injuries, or the “greener” the audit or safety culture survey, the higher the organization’s fatal incident risk” ·         “In contrast, conventional safety approaches rely on… Continue reading Safety Theatre: How success can mask growing safety risks

Safe As E47: Improving procedures via resilient skills – leveraging resilience engineering (quickisode)

This quickisode explores how resilience engineering – particularly enhancing resilient skills – can improve procedures. Source: Saurin, T. A., Wachs, P., & Costella, M. F. (2015). Exploring synergies between the design of procedures and the development of resilience skills. In Proceedings of the 6th Resilience Engineering Symposium. Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1KizbG4BtlOlxeLOeNwJs6?si=34xw1lyHTx2Gz_pzUm2gGw Make sure to subscribe to Safe As… Continue reading Safe As E47: Improving procedures via resilient skills – leveraging resilience engineering (quickisode)

STKY (the stuff that kills), energy, and improving hazard awareness: Energy Based Safety – Hallowell

More extracts from Matt Hallowell’s energy based safety: ·        “Research consistently shows that higher levels of energy result in greater harm. At a certain threshold (1500 Joules to be exact), the energy involved becomes so significant that the most likely outcome of contact is a SIF” ·        “Every [physical] injury results from a transfer of energy to… Continue reading STKY (the stuff that kills), energy, and improving hazard awareness: Energy Based Safety – Hallowell

Safe As E46: The Stuff That Kills People and weaknesses in Critical Control Programs

How do Critical Control programs succeed or fault and trip? And are CC observations calibrated to the actual things that kill or permanently injure people? This episode unpacks creative sentencing reports. Article: Lefsrud, L. M., Sattari, F., Gellatly, I. R., Wasel, C., Charuvil Elizabeth, R. M., Abdolmaleki, A., … & O’Neill, T. (2025). Final Report… Continue reading Safe As E46: The Stuff That Kills People and weaknesses in Critical Control Programs

Short and long-term effects of interactivity in immersive virtual reality training for occupational safety

This tested Immersive Virtual Reality (IVR) on “proactive safety behaviours and their antecedents”. They argue that the efficacy of IVR depends on the implementation quality, which depends on immersion, presence and interactivity. 22 training sessions were held with 68 participants. Extracts: ·        “Increased interactivity was shown to particularly improve the perceived control over safety issues and… Continue reading Short and long-term effects of interactivity in immersive virtual reality training for occupational safety

Psychological Distress and Post-Traumatic Symptoms Following Occupational Accidents

What are the psychological consequences of physical work incidents? 38 occupationally injured persons matched against 38 none injured. Background: ·      Prior work “reported that 34.7% of injured workers with chronic pain achieved full criteria for PTSD, and 18.2% had partial PTSD” ·        “victims of work-related accidents showed clinically relevant psychopathological symptoms, including post-traumatic symptoms, anxiety, depression, anger, and… Continue reading Psychological Distress and Post-Traumatic Symptoms Following Occupational Accidents