Design-Based Safety
Overlooked is the Need to Tell the Public About Our Skills
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.56094/jss.v54i2.67Keywords:
design-based safety, informed public, communicationAbstract
In the classic nursery rhyme, the skills of the butcher, the baker and the candlestick-maker are clearly defined. Protecting life, limb and property are generally ignored, however, with the belief that most people avoid dangerous hazards and that accidents will not happen. There is a lack of understanding that a hazard is usually dormant until a change of circumstance occurs and the hazard becomes armed and able to cause harm. When a hazard produces harm in terms of death, injury or damage, it is often identified only as an “accident,” and the existence of a hazard is ignored.
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Published
2018-10-01
How to Cite
MacCollum, D. (2018). Design-Based Safety: Overlooked is the Need to Tell the Public About Our Skills. Journal of System Safety, 54(2), 5. https://doi.org/10.56094/jss.v54i2.67
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