Modeling accidents for prioritizing prevention

The Workgroup Occupational Risk Model (WORM) project in the Netherlands is developing a comprehensive set of scenarios to cover the full range of occupational accidents. The objective is to support companies in their risk analysis and prioritization of prevention. This paper describes how the modeli...

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Veröffentlicht in:Reliability engineering & system safety 2007-12, Vol.92 (12), p.1701-1715
Hauptverfasser: Hale, A.R., Ale, B.J.M., Goossens, L.H.J., Heijer, T., Bellamy, L.J, Mud, M.L., Roelen, A., Baksteen, H., Post, J., Papazoglou, I.A., Bloemhoff, A., Oh, J.I.H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Workgroup Occupational Risk Model (WORM) project in the Netherlands is developing a comprehensive set of scenarios to cover the full range of occupational accidents. The objective is to support companies in their risk analysis and prioritization of prevention. This paper describes how the modeling has developed through projects in the chemical industry, to this one in general industry and how this is planned to develop further in the future to model risk prevention in air transport. The core modeling technique is based on the bowtie, with addition of more explicit modeling of the barriers needed for risk control, the tasks needed to ensure provision, use, monitoring and maintenance of the barriers, and the management resources and tasks required to ensure that these barrier life cycle tasks are carried out effectively. The modeling is moving from a static notion of barriers which can fail, to seeing risk control dynamically as (fallible) means for staying within a safe envelope. The paper shows how concepts develop slowly over a series of projects as a core team works continuously together. It concludes with some results of the WORM project and some indications of how the modeling is raising fundamental questions about the conceptualization of system safety, which need future resolution.
ISSN:0951-8320
1879-0836
DOI:10.1016/j.ress.2006.09.025