Safety Can't Be Measured An Evidence-Based Approach To Improving Risk Reduction

A partire da 39,99 $
49,99 $ Sconto del - 20%
Price history
Prezzo
Prezzo
Safety Can't Be Measured An Evidence-Based Approach To Improving Risk Reduction

Disponibilità

Routledge - routledge product information
Visa AmericanExpress ApplePay GooglePay

The British Prime Minister has avowed to ’kill off the health and safety culture’ which he describe…

Prezzo
39,99$ 49,99 $

Safety Can't Be Measured An Evidence-Based Approach To Improving Risk Reduction

The British Prime Minister has avowed to ’kill off the health and safety culture’ which he described as ’a monster’. Nonetheless industries face ever increasing public expectation and legislative pressure to improve safety when actually rates of safety improvement have slowed to a standstill. In Safety Can't Be Measured Andrew Townsend suggests the main reason for the stagnation of safety improvement is the failure to recognise the evolution in accident causation and to evolve with it. He severely criticises some aspects of current day management of occupational safety and contends that everyone is trying to continuously improve something in which improvement cannot be measured so the received wisdom underpinning safety management and regulation is not evidence-based and much of it is misguided. What is measured is the absence of safety - through incidents injuries and the occurrence of ill health. We cannot continue to justify these ways of doing things and claiming success by association without admitting there might be other explanations. In this series of short chapters occupational health and safety is put in context by demystifying the research regulation and management of health and safety. Using evidence Townsend challenges orthodox dogma by demonstrating that currently unused data could help deduce how safety really works and thus support alternative thought processes from which new approaches to risk reduction and safety management could emerge. |Safety Can't Be Measured An Evidence-based Approach to Improving Risk Reduction