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Safety Can't Be Measured: An Evidence-based Approach to Improving Risk Reduction (Revised)

Contributor(s): Townsend, Andrew S (Author)

ISBN: 9781409453116

Publisher: Routledge

Hardcover
$200.00
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Pub Date: August 27, 2013

Dewey: 658.382

LCCN: 2013006118

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.50" H x 8.50" L x 5.50" W ( 0.84 lbs) 200 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Safety improvement has actually slowed to a standstill. In Safety Can't Be Measured, Andrew Townsend suggests the main reason is the failure to recognise the evolution in accident causation and to evolve with it. He contends that everyone is trying to continuously improve something in which improvement cannot be measured. What is measured is the absence of safety - through incidents, injuries and the occurrence of ill health. We cannot justify these ways and claim success by association, without admitting there might be other explanations. Through these short chapters, occupational health and safety is put in context by demystifying the research, regulation and management of health and safety. Using evidence, Townsend challenges orthodox dogma, demonstrating that currently unused data could help deduce how safety really works, and thus support alternative thought processes from which new approaches to risk reduction and safety management could emerge.

Review Quotes: 'A pithy introduction to the problems many people are encountering in assessing their safety culture. Well-argued and extensively documented, Andrew Townsend makes a persuasive case why "safety can't be measured".' Sidney Dekker, Griffith University, Australia '...For all professionals responsible for assessing their companies' safety culture, this book offers an extensively argued case on why safety can't be measured.' Continuity Insurance & Risk 'It's a rare treat to come across a real tub-thumper of a book - but that's what Andrew Townsend has produced... This is a book written with zest and vigour. It's easy to read but poses difficult questions. Perhaps some enterprising safety professional will challenge their colleagues to read it and then discuss it. Now that would be a meeting I'd like to attend.' The RoSPA Occupational Safety & Health Journal 'As a layman my expectation of this book was to find the subject boring. Health and Safety brought to mind the dangers of playing conkers. I had much to learn and read the book at two sittings, finding it engaging and enjoyable. The evidence is clearly presented and the conclusions convincing.' David Dale, retired Land Surveyor, Ordnance Survey, UK

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