jcheeseright
Supporters
- Jun 14, 2012
- 4,280
- 2,261
Had you ever done an error management or human factors course you'd realise that what 'actually happened' 99% of the time isn't relevant, what ACTUALLY happened and how the accident happened isn't that important either. It's preventing that from happening again in future.not trolling matey, and i've worked in a big factory and what goes on the accident form is 95% of the time not what actually happened. its a sad fact that most accidents happen coz people arn't doing what they should, or cutting corners, or simply not thinking things through.
People cutting corners or not doing what they should is an organisational problem that is beholden upon everyone to report, lest someone get injured as a result of institutionalised negligence.