The Field Guide to Human Error Investigations
|
Of a piece with Charles Perrow’s Normal Accidents, Sidney Dekker’s book is compelling in rooting the cause of accidents in poor system design and unnecessary complexity, overlaying safety features and compliance measures which only make the problem worse — that is, at the door of management and not poor benighted subject matter experts who are expected to make sense of the Rube Goldberg machine that management expect them to operate.
There are two ways of looking at system accidents:
- It’s the meatware: Complex (and complicated) systems would be fine were it not for the meatware screwing things up. Human error is the main contributor to most system accidents, introduce unexpected failures into an essentially robust mechanism. Here, system design and management direction and oversight are otherwise effective strategies that are let down by unreliable human operators.
- It’s the system: Accidents are an inevitable by-product of operators doing the best they can within complex systems that contain unpredictable vulnerabilities, where risks shift and change over time and priorities are unclear, conflicting and variable. Here, human operators are let down by shortcomings in system design and conflicting management pressure.
Blame the meatware
Those investigating accidents are motivated in ways which will favour the “meatware” theory:
- Resource constraints: the wish for a simple narrative leading to a quick and inexpensive means of remediation
- Failure reaction: an instinctive reaction that since an accident has happened there must have been a failure
- Hindsight bias: the benefit of hindsight in that (i) the accident has happened (ii) the causal chain is now clear (thanks to the simple narrative) (iii) there has been a failure
- Political imperative: the “best” outcome for the organisation — and its management — is that there is no deep, systemic root cause requiring extensive recalibration of the system's fundamental architecture (much less criticism of management for its design or supervision), and that superficial action (rooting out/remediating “bad apples”) is all that is needed.
Recommendations thus tend to double down on the system design, further constraining employees from effectively managing situations and setting them up for blame should future accidents occur:
- Tightening procedures: Further removing autonomy from employees, obliging them to follow even more detailed instructions, rules and policies
- Introducing safety mechanisms: Adding more fail-safes, warning lights, system breakers and other mechanical second-order derivatives designed to eliminate meatware screw-ups but which actually further complicate the system and bury opportunities to directly observe its operation
- Downgrading employees: removing subject matter experts and replacing them with lower calibre (i.e., cheaper) employees with even less autonomy to follow the even more complicated rules and processes now introduced.
But blaming the meatware is to ignore history and be condemned yourself to repeat it. Changing the make-up of your operational workforce won’t make much difference if you leave the basic conditions under which they were obliged to operate unaddressed. Just adding more, increasingly detailed, policies — “codified over-reactions to situations that are unlikely to happen again” in Jason Fried’s elegant words[1] — will only make the gap between theory and practice wider.