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Webinar Price Details

Overview

The expectations of customers and other stakeholders is that organizations will design robust processes, and if failures occur the response will be sufficiently effective so that there will not be recurrence. Unfortunately, problems involving human error often don't get the attention they deserve.

Diagnosing human error should not be a random search, but instead an organized process conducted using flowcharts, typologies and/or checklists. This webinar will provide examples of the use of these techniques in order to have a more sound investigation.

Time after time the solutions to human error are not based on sound data, but instead on the need to close the investigation (either due to lack of interest or unrealistic timelines). Unconsidered are cognitive, physiological, environmental, and equipment issues, either temporary or permanent, that can interact to cause decision or physical errors.

Just because a single individual made an error does not mean the problem is necessarily unique to the individual; it may be just a bad "luck of the draw." The problem will often be due to the design of the work process in which the individual works, but in order to identify the causes there must be a consideration of person-process interaction to understand why the individual misperceived, misunderstood, decided wrongly, or acted wrongly. Only then can the solutions be properly aligned to the causes.

Why you should Attend

While process improvement and increases in equipment reliability have certainly reduced the rate of failure in many organizations/applications, the design of human beings hasn't really changed. Given that there are "normal" rates of human error it is important to be able to better identify the specific causes.

If a corrective action report indicates that the cause for a problem was human error and the solution was to retrain the individual, almost for sure it was simply a kneejerk response in order to get the CAR off someone's desk. Instead we need to know what type of human error it was and its cause. And if retraining is the right solution then doesn't that indicate that there was something wrong with the training process (e.g., a deeper level of cause)?

So what are the typical causes of human error and how does one go about determining which one(s) are relevant to a particular situation?  It requires thinking about the process of an individual as they interact with the work environment (e.g., equipment, other people, materials).

Areas Covered in the Session

  • How the rate of human error correlates to task complexity, and example "normal" rates
  • Example causal taxonomies used by various industries
  • A simple human-process interaction technique
  • Human factors guidance documents
  • Helping interviewees recall specific instances
  • Six human error solution categories

Who Will Benefit

  • Anyone Involved in Responding to Quality
  • Environmental
  • Safety, IT etc. Failures
  • Managers of management systems (e.g., ISO 9001, 14001)
  • Corrective Action Coordinators, and Process Owners/Managers who want more Reliable Processes

Speaker Profile

Duke Okes has been a consultant & instructor for designing, implementing, auditing, fixing and improving management systems since 1985. He was formerly a quality engineer with TRW Automotive, and holds degrees in technology, business and education. He holds ASQ certification as a manager of quality/organizational excellence, quality engineer and quality auditor.

He is the author of three books and dozens of articles on quality management topics, and has presented hundreds of workshops and spoken at numerous conferences on root cause analysis, quality auditing, failure mode & effects analysis, risk-based thinking, human error and other topics across the US as well as more than a dozen foreign countries. Since 2013 he has conducted more than five dozen webinars for a variety of providers.