Critical incident reporting systems : a necessary multilevel understanding

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Authors

Van der Westhuizen, Jaco
Stanz, Karel J.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

The nature of critical incident reporting systems and the reality of underreporting of critical incidents in complex socio-technical environments may have skewed our view of causality when it comes to safety management. This study explores the social construction of reporting through case based thematic analysis across three organizational levels and four stakeholder groups in an African Air Navigation Service Provider. The study shows that the reporting system and the act of reporting are not the only drivers. Reporting emerges as a mere actor, while new dimensions of safety drivers emerge from the study: safety also comes from a value contribution focus, a decentralized safety management approach, the centrality of reporting in a safety management system and the dependency on engaged relationships. The study concludes with an illustration of how these dimensions interact and inter-relate, and the necessity of such cognizance in system design and reviews.

Description

Keywords

Critical incident reporting, Safety management systems, Reporting behavior, Social construction

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Van der Westhuizen, J. & Stanz, K. 2017, 'Critical incident reporting systems : a necessary multilevel understanding', Safety Science, vol. 96, pp. 198-208.