2010
DOI: 10.1080/00140130903248801
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Human factors in safety and business management

Abstract: Human factors in safety is concerned with all those factors that influence people and their behaviour in safety-critical situations. In aviation these are, for example, environmental factors in the cockpit, organisational factors such as shift work, human characteristics such as ability and motivation of staff. Careful consideration of human factors is necessary to improve health and safety at work by optimising the interaction of humans with their technical and social (team, supervisor) work environment. This… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…2009; CCH Australia Limited 2009; Cox and Cox 1996; Ellis 2001; Fuller and Vassie 2004; Geller 1998; Grimaldi and Simonds 1989; Hammer 1985; McSween 1995; Mol 2003; Montero et al . 2009; Petersen 1978, 1996; Roughton and Mercurio 2002; Vogt et al . 2010).…”
Section: Ohs Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…2009; CCH Australia Limited 2009; Cox and Cox 1996; Ellis 2001; Fuller and Vassie 2004; Geller 1998; Grimaldi and Simonds 1989; Hammer 1985; McSween 1995; Mol 2003; Montero et al . 2009; Petersen 1978, 1996; Roughton and Mercurio 2002; Vogt et al . 2010).…”
Section: Ohs Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is populated largely by textbooks directed at students and practitioners in OHS. Consequently, they are not empirically grounded representations of what constitutes OHS management, nor are they conceptualizations that are verified or validated through systematic field study; rather, they are their respective authors' attempts at ordering concepts, tools, techniques, technologies and insights (for example, Archer et al 2009;CCH Australia Limited 2009;Cox and Cox 1996;Ellis 2001;Fuller and Vassie 2004;Geller 1998;Grimaldi and Simonds 1989;Hammer 1985;McSween 1995;Mol 2003;Montero et al 2009;Petersen 1978Petersen , 1996Roughton and Mercurio 2002;Vogt et al 2010). This is also the domain of government prescriptions, codes of practice and advisory pamphlets (such as those put out by the NSW and Victorian Workcover authorities in Australia and the Health and Safety Executive in the UK); national standards promulgated by national bodies ( Petersen (1978) provides a set of safety management recipes that address safety concepts, managing safety performance, measuring safety performance, motivating safety performance, plus additional safety techniques.…”
Section: Prescriptive Ohs Management Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several regulatory organizations including the ICAO and IHST are nevertheless promoting proactive safe design (Rashid and Braithwaite [8]). We therefore propose that to be sustainable and balance performance criteria with worker wellbeing, the airliner maintenance sector and in particular de-icing operations should aim for systemic design throughout their activity lifecycles.…”
Section: Integration Of Ergonomicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Maintenance activities represent 10-15% of airline budgets, two thirds of which are for labor costs in the case of heavy maintenance burdens (McFadden and Worrells 2012 [11]). In the case of commercial flight, the proportion of accidents related to airliner maintenance is 12-20% (Rashid et al [8]). In Europe, 10-20% of workplace accidents and 10-15% of deaths in all industrial sectors are associated with maintenance activities (EU-OSHA [12]).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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