1 / 21

Organisational Resilience following a Major Disaster

Organisational Resilience following a Major Disaster. Mr. David G. Broadbent B.A.( Hons ), M.A.P.S ., F.A.I.M ., F.I.S.Q.E.M . Safety Psychologist TransformationalSafety.Com. Types of of Major Disaster Scenarios Natural Types of Disasters. Types of of Major Disaster Scenarios

alagan
Télécharger la présentation

Organisational Resilience following a Major Disaster

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Organisational Resilience following a Major Disaster Mr. David G. Broadbent B.A.(Hons), M.A.P.S., F.A.I.M., F.I.S.Q.E.M. Safety Psychologist TransformationalSafety.Com

  2. Types of of Major Disaster Scenarios • Natural Types of Disasters

  3. Types of of Major Disaster Scenarios • Man-Made and Technological Types of Disasters

  4. Organisational Resilience following a Major Disaster

  5. Impacts of Major Disaster Scenarios - Individual • Intrusive symptoms • Persistently re-experiencing the event in thoughts, images, recollections, daydreams, and/or nightmares • Feeling upset, distressed and/or anxious in the presence of reminders of the event • Avoidance symptoms • Avoiding places, thoughts, conversations and/or people associated with the event • Problems recalling some aspects of the event • Losing interest in formerly enjoyable and important activities of life • Feeling “removed” from other people • Feeling numb

  6. Impacts of Major Disaster Scenarios • Arousal symptoms • Being on the alert for danger • Being jumpy and easily startled • Experiencing sleep disturbances (such as not being able to get to sleep, waking up often, or having vivid dreams or nightmares) • Difficulty concentrating • Irritability or angry outbursts

  7. Impacts of Major Disaster Scenarios - Organisational • Rigidity of the organization when proposing change or a new direction. • Broken connections, between for instance older employees and newer employees that despite mutual willingness, can't be put back together again. • No flow between different divisions of an organization or between the organization and the outside world. It's difficult to have flow when there are broken connections. • The organization or the department appears to be standing still in time. • Large groups of people in the organisation are focused on the past instead of the future. • High degree of staff turnover and exponential increase in people management costs. • Significant decline in operational integrity – increased risk of recurrence

  8. This cannot be allowed to continue! • It is organisationally irresponsible! • It is ethically irresponsible to expose our people to the ongoing effects of Major Disasters! • From every perspective we have an organisational responsibility (both corporate and ethical) to mitigate loss and strive toward recovery (both corporate and ethical).

  9. What is Resilience – and why does it matter • Resilience is generally viewed as the ability to positively adapt and/or “bounce back” from adverse situations • Staying positive when the going gets tough. • Hamel and Valikangas (2003) capture this well: • Resilienceis not about responding to a one time crisis... It’s about continuously anticipating and adjusting... It is about having the capacity for change before the need for change becomes obvious • The Goal is an organization that is constantly making its future rather than defending its past

  10. Do we really need to be concerned about this? • The Black Swan • Rare (outside the bounds of known likelihoods) • Unpredictable (unable to anticipate) • Severe (unprecedented impact) • Event (good or bad)

  11. Just a few Black Swan Disasters? • Challenger (7) / Columbia (7) • Deepwater Horizon (11) • Texas City (15) • Chernobyl (>56) • United 232 (108) • Kansas City Hyatt (114) • Piper Alpha (167) • Herald of Free Enterprise (186) • Tenerife (583) • Bhopal (>2200)

  12. Resilience Engineering (RE) • Resilience – the ability to adjust its functioning to sustain operations during expected conditions and in the face of escalating demands, disturbances, and unforeseen circumstances. • Resilience Engineering – the tools that promote resilience: anticipate, monitor, respond, learn’ Erik HollnagelEditor: Resilience Engineering Perspectives Volume 1:Remaining Sensitive to the Possibility of Failure

  13. The Resilience Engineering (RE) Hallmarks • Anticipate – knowing what to expect;long-term threats and opportunities • Monitor – knowing what to look for;near-term developments and threats (critical steps) • Respond – knowing what to do;capable of addressing expected and unexpected conditions • Learn – knowing what has happened (experience) and what to change (improvement)

  14. High Reliability Operations(HRO) • “HROsare organisations that function effectively under challenging multi hazard environments yet manage to get the job done over sustained periods of timewith minimal, if any, negative event occurring. They are known for making ‘good’ decisions that consistently result in safe and reliable operations.” David G BroadbentDirector: TransformationoanlSafety.com “Safety at the Sharp End”, Johannesburg, SOUTH AFRICA, 2012

  15. The High Reliability Operations (RE) Hallmarks • Preoccupation with Failure • When near-misses occur, these are viewed as evidence of systems that should be improved to reduce the potential for accidents/disaster. • Rather than viewing near-misses as proof that the system has effective safeguards (a false belief), they are viewed as symptomatic of areas in need of more attention. • Reluctance to Simplify • Simple processes are good, but simplistic explanations for why things work or fail are risky. Avoiding overly simple explanations of failure (unqualified staff, inadequate training, communication breakdown, etc.) is essential in order to understand the true reasons why “bad things happen” • Sensitivity to Operations • Preserving constant awareness by leaders and staff of the state of the systems and processes that affect the integrity of the operaion/s. This awareness is key to noting risks and preventing them.

  16. The High Reliability Operations (RE) Hallmarks • Commitment to Resilience • Leaders and all employees need to be effectively trained, and prepared, to know how to respond when system failures do occur. • Deference to Expertise • Leaders and supervisors, must be willing to listen and respond to the insights of staff who know how processes really work. • If this is lacking shall not be a culture in which high reliability is possible.

  17. The Causes of Tomorrows Disasters Exist Today!

  18. What are the advantages of combining RE & HRO to achieve Organisational Resilience? • RE emphasizes adapting – to maintain success. • HRO emphasizes reliability – avoiding failure. • Fundamentally, the only difference is PERSPECTIVE! • Together they provide Exothermic Protection coupled with unprecedented ability to maintain a high level of Resilience following your Black Swan (Major Disaster)

  19. Things to REMEMBER? • Performance conditions are always imperfect: resources and time are finite, training and procedures are incomplete, and planning is approximate. • The reliability of individual components or subsystems cannot always effectively predict how they combine to create unique pathways to system failure. • Safety is what you do, not what you have (continuous adaptation to changes and disruptions—it must be core business – not an add-on). • People create safety within inherently imperfect systems.

  20. Things to DO? • Make boundaries explicit, and build a “preoccupation with failure.” • Give people coping skills (adaptive capacities) at boundaries. • When introducing change, • avoid introduction of local factors that intensify volatilityfor the front-line worker, (control) and • preserve local factors that support flexibility in off-normal conditions (adaptability). • Pay attention to: • avoiding human failures at critical steps, and • improving system health (removing the accumulation of latent system weaknesses) • Expand Human Error from a myopic operational focus to an organizational focus. • Monitor how you monitor system health and safety.

More Related