Info!
UPDATED 1 Sept: The EI library in London is temporarily closed to the public, as a precautionary measure in light of the ongoing COVID-19 situation. The Knowledge Service will still be answering email queries via email , or via live chats during working hours (09:15-17:00 GMT). Our e-library is always open for members here: eLibrary , for full-text access to over 200 e-books and millions of articles. Thank you for your patience.

The Energy Institute (EI), in collaboration with DNV (Det Norske Veritas), has p ...

The Energy Institute (EI), in collaboration with DNV (Det Norske Veritas), has published new guidance to help non-specialists manage human factors analysis of safety critical tasks. Managing human factors in safety critical task planning can help reduce the chance of human failure, which otherwise could lead to a major accident. Although the importance of human failures in accident causation is well known, historically analysis of technical failures in major accident hazard safety reports has dominated over human failures. There are some signs that this is beginning to change, with a higher volume of human factors analyses being conducted. Regulators are also responding to public expectations concerning proactive risk management, with requirements that safety critical human tasks are comprehensively analysed and their risk appropriately assessed. While there are benefits in encouraging deeper analysis of safety critical tasks, there has been a lack of available information to help those without a human factors background effectively identify and manage safety risks in the workplace. Guidance on human factors safety critical task analysis aims to help fill this gap. Published under the auspices of the EI’s Human and Organisational Factors Committee (HOFCOM), Guidance on human factors safety critical task analysis provides a seven-step methodology for conducting safety critical task analysis with case study material, supporting practical tools, and examples of good and bad practice. This publication builds on the EI’s portfolio of work in human factors and the intention is that this guidance will become part of the wider safety assessment toolbox, leading to better integration of human failure assessment into safety studies.
Please login to save this item