Title :
The Development of Questions to Determine the Effectiveness of the Incident Investigation Process for Electrical Incidents
Author :
Jooma, Zarheer ; Hutchings, Jessica ; Hoagland, Hugh
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
Abstract :
Electrical incidents occur globally, providing valuable opportunities for practical-knowledge-based learning and improvements. The underlying root causes of an incident are not always apparent, and an incident investigation method or a loss causation model is required to analyze the facts gathered from an incident. It is important that an incident investigation is effectively executed in order to add value. An ineffective investigation may lead to recurrent incidents and the wastage of resources. Investigators performing an incident investigation can be biased and subjective. Incident investigation methods can be also subjective. Adequately resolving root causes is another subjective area. In order to mitigate subjectivity and biases, various models such as the cause and effect diagram, the five whys method, the sequential cause analysis technique, the management oversight and risk tree, effects and causal factor charting, change analysis, barrier analysis, and casual factor analysis are examined. This aims to improve knowledge on the application of a technique and to establish a review method to determine the effectiveness of an incident investigation process. The review method consists of the development of survey-type questions that can be applied to industry, and this serves as the aim of this research paper.
Keywords :
electrical accidents; electrical safety; fault trees; losses; risk analysis; barrier analysis; bias mitigation; causal factor charting; change analysis; electrical incident; incident investigation process; loss causation model; management and oversight risk tree; practical knowledge-based improvement; practical knowledge-based learning; recurrent incident; sequential cause analysis technique; subjectivity mitigation; Accidents; Analytical models; Industries; Injuries; Linear systems; Safety; Writing; 5 whys; Accident investigation; MORT; SCAT; accident investigation; cause and effect diagram; cause and effect diagram (CED); five whys; incident investigation; loss causation; management and oversight risk tree (MORT); root cause analysis; systematic cause analysis technique (SCAT);
Journal_Title :
Industry Applications, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIA.2015.2431645