Near Miss Reporting Program to Enhance Construction Worker Safety Performance

Construction safety performance in the past decade has stagnated where only marginal improvements have occurred. Past safety performance has been driven by lagging indicators including capturing safety data only after an illness, injury, or fatality occurred. A significant improvement can be realized through effective use of leading indicators, such as near miss data reporting, collection, and analysis. The primary objective is to identify best practices associated with a near miss reporting program for construction companies. A near miss reporting program was created from results of a review of literature and investigating established near miss reporting programs of many construction companies. The created near miss reporting program was implemented on construction projects of companies that previously failed to collect near miss data. Project safety managers and workers were surveyed periodically throughout the duration of the construction project to capture benefits, limitations, lessons learned, and suggestions from the implemented near miss reporting program. Results indicate near miss data can be reported, collected, and analyzed by construction personnel. Research deliverables including near miss reporting program guidelines, reporting flowchart, employee orientation presentation, and reporting materials can be used to implement a near miss reporting program or enhance an existing program for construction companies.

[1]  Elizabeth Capezuti,et al.  Reporting near-miss events in nursing homes. , 2006, Nursing outlook.

[2]  G. G. M. Cojazzi,et al.  Biases in incident reporting databases : An empirical study in the chemical process industry , 2008 .

[3]  Carlos T. Formoso,et al.  Identification, analysis and dissemination of information on near misses: A case study in the construction industry , 2010 .

[4]  Mike Williamsen Near-Miss Reporting: The Missing Link of Safety Culture Revolution , 2012 .

[5]  L Lisette Kanse,et al.  Biases in incident reporting databases: An empirical study in the chemical process industry , 2004 .

[6]  Melissa J Perry,et al.  Near-miss reporting system as an occupational injury preventive intervention in manufacturing. , 2011, American journal of industrial medicine.

[7]  Jimmie Hinze,et al.  AN EVALUATION OF SAFETY PERFORMANCE MEASURES FOR CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS , 2003 .

[8]  Charles Reese,et al.  Accident/Incident Investigation , 2001 .

[9]  H. Howe,et al.  Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries , 1996 .

[10]  Yvonne Toft,et al.  Models of causation safety , 2012 .

[11]  J. Callum,et al.  Reporting of near‐miss events for transfusion medicine: improving transfusion safety , 2001, Transfusion.

[12]  A. Gawlinski,et al.  A "near-miss" model for describing the nurse's role in the recovery of medical errors. , 2004, Journal of professional nursing : official journal of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing.

[13]  Andreas W. Momber Health, Safety and Environment , 2008 .

[14]  Howard Kunreuther,et al.  Near‐Miss Incident Management in the Chemical Process Industry , 2003, Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis.

[15]  U. Ritwik Risk-based approach to near miss , 2002 .