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Injury-free culture

Krause, T. Behavior-Based Safety Process Managing Involvement for an Injury-Free Culture. New York Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1999. [Pg.544]

Safety Process Managing Involvement for an Injury-free Culture (Krause, 1997). Ultimately each site should develop their own inventory of critical behaviors, and the list is usually not that long— perhaps 15 to 25 behaviors that are genuinely crucial to safety performance. Earnest advises that the list be kept to five or ten critical behaviors (1994, p. 3). [Pg.267]

Krause, T. R., Hidley, J. H., and Hodson, S. J., The Behavior-Based Safety Process Managing Involvement for an Injury-Free Culture, 2nd ed.. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 19%. [Pg.49]

Similarly, if a single preventable patient fatality occurs, it is highly likely that its causal roots—the particular exposures that caused it—occur frequently. This is not to say these exposures are constantly present. Their occurrence is likely to be intermittent and at unpredictable intervals. Nevertheless, each time a patient is exposed to a hazard, the exposure represents an important risk no matter that no patient harm has yet resulted. Thus, an injury-free culture is not simply one that doesn t tolerate incidents it is one that doesn t tolerate exposure to hazards. [Pg.39]

An injury-free culture is not simply one that doesn t tolerate incidents it is one that doesn t tolerate exposure to hazards. [Pg.39]

Currently the entire safety culture at this company centers on the word safety, which is perceived as being injury-free, and a lot of effort is directed to be injury-free rather than risk-free. [Pg.74]

A cell culture laboratory, in which activities are restricted to manipulation of established or pathogen-free derived cell lines, is a relatively safe workplace. Major risks are related to potential injuries resulting from liquid nitrogen manipulation or glassware accidents. [Pg.30]


See other pages where Injury-free culture is mentioned: [Pg.66]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.358]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.866]    [Pg.565]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.867]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.220]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.294]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.760]    [Pg.230]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.623]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.206]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.39 ]




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