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HUMAN ELEMENT

HUMAN ELEMENT. WHY DO THINGS GO WRONG?. SOME NUMBERS TO THINK ABOUT……. 4 – Major Incidents occurred EVERY TWO DAYS due to Human Errors during 2008. 40 - Ships collided, grounded or suffered explosions EVERY THREE DAYS from 2000 to 2005.

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HUMAN ELEMENT

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  1. HUMAN ELEMENT WHY DO THINGS GO WRONG? by: G Sachdeva

  2. SOME NUMBERS TO THINK ABOUT……. • 4 – Major Incidents occurred EVERY TWO DAYS due to Human Errors during 2008. • 40 - Ships collided, grounded or suffered explosions EVERY THREE DAYS from 2000 to 2005. • $ 4,000,000 - WAS THE VALUE OF CLAIM EVERY DAY from 2000 to 2010 • $ 400,000,000 – THE VALUE OF CLAIMS PAID OUT BY underwriters in 2008. • $ 4,000,000,000 – was the cost of claim for Exxon Valdez. • $ 40,000,000,000 – EXPECTED LOSS FOR BP FROM SPILL IN THE US GULF. • $ 400,000,000,000,000 – Estimated Market Value of ExxonMobil in 2012. HUMAN ELEMENT WHY DO THINGS GO WRONG? by: G Sachdeva

  3. The EIGHT traits of human element? HUMANS by: G Sachdeva

  4. Human Traits 1. Make sense of things What is obvious to you, might not be same to the others. What you see and understand, is what you expect to see. Situations are constantly unfolding, you must share with colleagues. 2. Take Risks Everybody takes risk at some time or the other and this is inescapable. Human perception of risk is quite different from the probability with which events occur. We have to ensure that our perception of risk maps well into the world with which we interact. . 3. Make decisions People make decisions differently to how they think they make decisions. Decision making is different when you are learning as compared to when you are an expert. Experience does not make you an expert, but to be an expert you must be experienced. 4. Make mistakes Making mistakes and recovering from them is a fundamental human strength Without error there is no learning. Potentially harmful mistakes must be prevented or minimised. Both individual competence and organisational culture are important for this. by: G Sachdeva

  5. Human Traits 5. Get tired & stressed Fatigue and Stress have their causes and consequences. We must always know how to avoid fatigue and stress Workload can be managed with experience even when the job demands are high 6. Learn and develop People learn all the time.. It is important to learn the right thing at the right time. People aspire to learn and the organisation should manage this to enhance safety and profitability. In the absence of good management, these aspirations may dominate or be ignored – bad outcome. 7. Work with others Sometimes we work alone, at other times we work as a team member Key problem is to have people skills as well as technical task skills Things go wrong when these two skills are absent.. 8. Communicate with others Successful communication involves clear transmission, is only part of the story Even with clear transmission, both parties were interpreting different meanings Responsibility of the listener as well as the person sending the message should be understood. . by: G Sachdeva

  6. 1. Make sense of things Human Traits What is obvious to you, might not be same to the others. What you see and understand, is what you expect to see. Situations are constantly unfolding, you must share with colleagues. by: G Sachdeva

  7. Human Traits • We make sense of things which support • our goals, plans and activities. • We see what we expect to see. • Each person’s sense making is unique based on their physiology, • self culture, experience, social and intellectual needs. • Each person interprets the same situation differently. • We make sense of things based on – • Our personal needs • Our self concept • Our past experience • The goals we share with others • Our current practicalities. 1. Make sense of things by: G Sachdeva

  8. Human Traits • 1 - Our personal needs • We have huge amounts of information. • Our mind filters these based on the needs • Themost basic filter concerns our survival. • We get hungry, thirsty and tired. These demand attention. • When ignored these needs dominate our behaviour. • A more advanced filter deals with the need to find acceptance by social groups we value, such as family, friends and colleagues. • Yet another advanced filter is concerned with recognition by our peers for our personal achievements. • The most advanced filter looks at how the world can contribute to our own growth and development – for personal fulfillment. 1. Make sense of things by: G Sachdeva

  9. Human Traits • 2 - Our self-concept • Each of us know who we are and what we • are like. Our sense of personal identity is • developed through contact with friends, family, workmates, managers and our cross cultural colleagues. • How we make sense of the same situation depends on our sense of self – whether we want to listen what we are told to, or, to follow instructions, or to negotiate with authority etc. and this influences our approach to team working. • Sometimes we may overload ourselves, in order to comply with what we believe is expected of us, due to our own self-esteem. This could cause to making incorrect sense of things by ignoring the big picture and concentrating on a narrow focus to our self esteem. 1. Make sense of things by: G Sachdeva

  10. Human Traits • 3 - Our past experience • The conclusions and reflections from past • Experience shape how we make sense of • present situation. • The past experience may consists of beliefs, mental models, rules, procedures and stories which we apply to the present environment to make it meaningful. The more experience we have, the more we apply the past to the present, even this it is only a projection and may not be the best in the present situation. • Failure to appreciate this sometimes results in serious incidents such as grounding, collisions etc. • We also confuse experience with expertise. Experience may result in wrong conclusions, over confidence, complacency and risk taking. 1. Make sense of things by: G Sachdeva

  11. Human Traits • 4 – Our shared goals • If we share a common goal, agree on a • joint goal and refine our understanding, • We can make better sense of things. • Goal sharing can be helped by training in teamwork and understanding of each others roles, capabilities and limitations. • Where goals are different, problems occur. For eg: when Safety considerations are given a lower priority over Commercial matters and is seen to conflict with profit making. • When one perspective is allowed to dominate the other – common goals cease to exist. If situation is allowed to continue – failure occurs. For eg: if Regulators dominate Ship owners, there is room for failure due conflict of interests. 1. Make sense of things by: G Sachdeva

  12. Human Traits • 5 – Our need to be practical • As we have limited time always, we • process tasks based on incomplete • Information. We go for a working level • of understanding rather than dig deep to get all the facts. • An example of this is the modern Bridge technology and computers. ECDIS, ARPA, RADAR, UMS, Computers, OWS, ODME, PMS etc are all examples of technology advances which are complex and we settle for the bare working knowledge. • In times of Crisis, we need simplicity of equipment to get the job done practically and as best possible. 1. Make sense of things by: G Sachdeva

  13. 1. Make sense of things Human Traits How big is SENSE MAKING problem? Inappropriate sense making is a costly problem in terms of lost profits, fines, injuries, investigations, legal costs, insurance costs, environment damages or sheer human misery. As per Lloyds Register, an average of 182 ships were lost EVERY YEAR between 1995 and 2007. This amounts to 160 Mill GRT lost. When does SENSE MAKING get out of control? Too many procedures, rules, regulations and technologies. These are well intended, but land up doing the opposite. Every incident leads to investigations & new recommendations to plug the loop holes – these are over-prescriptive & complicated. Bigger rule books and more gadgets increase uncertainty, ambiguity and complexity. Automation leads to over-reliance on machines and lack of inter-personal relations. Confusion reigns, when this fails Insufficient attention to Team Work and Training, communication skills and cross culture tolerances. by: G Sachdeva

  14. Human Traits • SOME DO’s • Ask your people – perhaps they know or observe something you missed. • If you observe an unsafe behaviour – go for the root cause and ask the 5 WHY’s, which is turn will help you understand more. • Get the team work training, to understand what motivates your team and how they interpret your messages. • SOME DON’T’S • Don’t assume other people think and understand like you do. They have different backgrounds and pressures and see differently. • Don’t ignore the hierarchy of others needs – physiological, safety, social, self respect and self development. • Don’t under-estimate the power of your feelings, personal circumstances, current pressures and past experiences. They decide how you react next. 1. Make sense of things by: G Sachdeva

  15. 2. Take Risks Human Traits No matter how good is our sense making, we can never match the complexity of the world. The assumptions we make and the things we do attract an element of RISK. RISK refers to the chance that our sense-making will be inadequate to deal safely and effectively. OUR PERCEPTION OF RISK HAS LITTLE TO DO WITH ACTUAL PROBABILITY The THREE main factors that influence our sense of risk are – • The amount of control we think we have – PERCEIVED CONTROL • The amount of value something has for us – PERCEIVED VALUE • The extent to which things are familiar to us – PERCEIVED FAMILIARITY by: G Sachdeva

  16. 2. Take Risks Human Traits PERCEIVED CONTROL The more control WE BELIEVE we have, the less risk WE BELIEVE we are taking. Shore staff believe the risk of ship incidents is TWICE of that believed by Crew. Overconfidence, skills or knowledge missing, Stress or fatigue lead to wrong beliefs. People with well developed skills and highly pertinent assessment have a better control over any situation. Example of flipping a coin 8 times – What is the probability of the following sequence? 1 – HHTHTTHT 2 – HHHHTTTT 3 - TTTTTTTT What is the probability of the 9th flip coming out TAIL? by: G Sachdeva

  17. 2. Take Risks Human Traits 2 – PERCEIVED VALUE The more an action appears to support a goal that WE BELIEVE is important or highly desirable, the LESS RISKY it will appear to be. e:g: 1) Entering into a port beyond the point of no return to pick up pilot. 2) Leaving berth hastily in foggy condition to arrive at the next port earlier. An action can also appear to be high value if it is the easiest way to achieve the goal. e:g: We routinely take short cuts in flogging reports / checklists to satisfy the company requirements for Hot-work, tank entry or Bunkering etc. by: G Sachdeva

  18. 2. Take Risks Human Traits 3 – PERCEIVED FAMILIARITY THE MORE FAMILIAR AN ACTION IS, THE LESS RISKY IT WILL APPEAR TO BE This is also known as COMPLACENCY which is known to be a major contributor to most accidents. Like HUMAN ERROR, complacency is an effect rather than a cause. If our surroundings are familiar, we feel safer and more comfortable and less prone to examine the risks on the job. E:g: Pilotage in Singapore traits – done it a 100 times What can go wrong now? ZOEY by: G Sachdeva

  19. 2. Take Risks Human Traits HOW TO GET BETTER AWARE OF RISKS? Understand that RISK CANNOT BE TOTALLY ELIMINATED. People NEED RISKS to provide excitement and avoid boredom. It is not the Risk elimination that we seek, it is the AWARENESS of Risk in their OWN BEHAVIOUR and the BEHAVIOUR OF THEIR COLLEAGUES. This awareness can be raised by training in human perception of Risk and the factors that influence it. by: G Sachdeva

  20. Human Traits 2. Take Risks SOME DO’S Do be suspicious if things seem under control and on track, familiar, comfortable, quiet and safe. You might be missing something. Do try to train yourself and your team for HUMAN PERCEPTION OF RISK. It will avert the development of Complacency. Do try to maintain your fall back measures when faced with new and sophisticated equipment. Going back to basic seamanship might get you out of trouble should these complex instruments fail. SOME DON’T’S Do Not confuse qualification with experience. People cannot become aware of equipment risks by just studying the books. They need to experience these first hand, and mentored, monitored by other colleagues. If people are promoted without enough experience, they will under-estimate the risks they take and expose all toe great dangers and costs. DO NOT confuse a person’s rank with his status of information. The higher the rank, the greater the responsibility but they have to ensure that those with relevant knowledge are heard. by: G Sachdeva

  21. Human Traits HOW DO PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS? To make a rational decision, you must – Have complete information about alternatives Be able to distinguish between alternatives Use comprehensive criteria Have the time to do all this. In practical situation, this does not happen as TIME IS ALWAYS LIMITED and INFORMATION IS NEVER COMPLETE. People’s decisions are a trade-off between available information (thoroughness) and the time available (efficiency) 3. Make decisions by: G Sachdeva

  22. 3. Make decisions Human Traits EFFICIENCY vs THOROUGHNESS Efficiency increases when people spend less time and effort in thinking and more time in action. When this is reversed, thoroughness increases as the cost of efficiency. For an organisation – If Safety and Quality are very important then thoroughness is favoured. If production targets and outputs are emphasised, then efficiency if favoured at the cost of safety. Every decision made is a compromise between Efficiency and Thoroughness. Thoroughness is produced by training, mentoring, on-the-job briefing and experience over time. If organisational expectations are too demanding and the staff are not thoroughly trained, this will lead to unnecessary risk taking with drastic consequences. by: G Sachdeva

  23. 3. Make decisions Human Traits 10 RULES WHICH GOVERN OUR WORKPLACE BEHAVIOUR • It looks fine or it is not really important. (If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it) • It’s normally OK or much quicker this way (done it million times) • It is good enough for now (it is better than average expectations) • It was checked earlier and we will recheck it later (dangerous) • There is no time or no one to do it now so do not worry (false hope) • I do not remember how to do it and do not have the time (see manual) • We must get this done in time – no time for procedures (dangerous) • It looks like something we know. (assumption convenient for next step) • If you do not tell anyone, I won’t either (lets ssshhh, we took shortcuts) • I am not an expert so will let you handle it (don’t want responsibility) by: G Sachdeva

  24. 3. Make decisions Human Traits Why do people break rules? • At work, people are immersed in organisational culture which favours efficiency . When rules are knowingly broken, it is to improve the teams efficiency. Rule breaking is a major cause of accidents. • The violations arise due to following – • Trying to solve a pressing problem with limited knowledge instead of stopping and seeking advice. • Trying to take a short-cut or work-around. Soon these become the norm as these are seen as efficient measures. When things go wrong, the short-cut taker gets disciplined rather than the Policy maker whose policy might not be practical in the first place. • When a supervision is lacking – this allows unchecked broken rules, sets in complacency and allows rule breaking to get worse and frequent due to no accountability. by: G Sachdeva

  25. 3. Make decisions Human Traits HOW DOES ORGANISATIONAL CULTURE INFLUENCE DECISIONS? • Incident reporting policy – Most companies have it, but reporting should not conflict with reputation, bonus etc. Absence of report does not mean everything is OK. Incident reporting may not increase safety. • Management Policy – Managers usually favour efficiency to thoroughness. Non efficiency is noticed fast. If things go well, its all praise. If they do not then the blame is for lack of thoroughness. • Subcontracting Policy – Subcontractors are under pressure to perform but if they report too much they may lose contract as they feel efficiency is favoured over thoroughness. • Cost Policy – Most Organisations like to reduce cost by cutting down unnecessary, but the interpretation may be different. It is often used to favour efficiency over thoroughness. • Policy Integrity – Organisations say they want Safety (thoroughness) but their Policies and performance measures target efficiency. by: G Sachdeva

  26. 3. Make decisions Human Traits Expert decision making Decision makers are dependent on their training and experience. Expert decision makers – • Have an accurate mental picture of what is going on and what can happen next. – Situational Awareness. • Perception, Comprehension and Projection. • Are able to arrive at good decisions directly – often under time pressure. – Situational Familiarity. • Using past similarity of incident or from stories heard before to compare the present situation and to project it to the end result. • Novice decision makers – must rely on the rule book or look for a mentor which takes time and they may take decisions based on what makes most sense in their limited experience background. by: G Sachdeva

  27. Human Traits 3. Make decisions SOME DO’S Do recognise that everyone in the organisation balances efficiency with thoroughness. If people are untrained or inexperienced and cross the line, they sacrifice thoroughness and cause unsafe situations, risks. Do support investment in training and competency testing, apprenticeship, mentoring. Do find ways to motivate and retain staff following the 10 years to make them experts in your organisation. SOME DON’T’S • Don’t send mixed messages to your staff asking for safety and demanding efficiency at the same time to push them to take short cuts. Rule breaking is a major cause of accidents. • Don’t assume that you can take shortcuts in getting expertise. It takes about 10 years of structures and guided experience to develop an expert – do not lose him. by: G Sachdeva

  28. 4. Make mistakes Human Traits Making mistakes is normal for people including experts, but safety critical mistakes can have serious consequences. The mistakes we make could be – • Skill based – well practiced, so tend to lose focus or suffer memory lapse and can lead to mistakes. • Rule based – where we focus more on procedures and rules or apply rule incorrectly than use good seamanship and common sense and make mistakes. • Knowledge based – where what needs to be done requires knowledge, but, we make incorrect sense of situation on wrong information. This is usually a result of insufficient training or experience or bad communication. by: G Sachdeva

  29. 4. Make mistakes Human Traits 2008 – A DISASTEROUS YEAR? • US$ 548, 000, 000 PAID IN CLAIMS DURING 2008 • 135 VESSELS WERE LOST, NEARLY 3 PER WEEK • 41 OF THESE WERE DISASTERS (CLAIM $ 18M, IMPACT OVER $85M) • 1600 PEOPLE DIED OR WENT MISSING DUE MARITIME DISASTERS • 150 PEOPLE DIED ON GEN CARGO SHIPS YEARLY FROM 2002-2008 by: G Sachdeva

  30. 4. Make mistakes Human Traits Factors which mostly lead to mistakes Inadequate rest or high stress level – reduces attention, concentration and slow reaction. Insufficient training and experience – trying to do a job with little knowledge or failure to understand and prevent a dangerous situation. Inadequate Communications – It involves clear messaging, empathy, active listening and understanding cultural norms. Inadequate time – Time pressure where thoroughness is sacrificed for efficiency Inadequate design – Poor design or over complicated design increases stress and encourages use of short cuts and mistakes. Inadequate staffing – Less people or people with extended contracts tend to cause stress, de-motivation, low morale and overload others. Inadequate Safety culture – MOST IMPORTANT – Commitment from Senior management ashore, investment in training, making the right policies and procedures and overseeing implementation onboard. by: G Sachdeva

  31. 4. Make mistakes Human Traits Mistakes are PREDICTABLE and could be traced down to CAUSE & EFFECT Here the primary cause, secondary cause and root cause is identified and fixed. Safety specialists perform risk assessment and rectify flaws in work procedures. Efficiency usually wins (economic considerations) Behaviour drifts towards danger (also known as Complacency) Mistakes are invisible till a disaster strikes (just a decision before) Accidents keep happening anyway (Organisational culture). The Cause & Effect analysis is mostly historical based on what happened. In live situation as every incident can be traced down to differing circumstances, this usually becomes additional bureaucracy. by: G Sachdeva

  32. 4. Make mistakes Human Traits These could happen UNPREDICTABLY from behavior of complex systems This is a new view how mistakes are made. The world today is a complex system of interacting, circular relationships. Humans Create Safety – Humans do not cause errors, but the gaps in any system are corrected by humans if they are given freedom to cope with unexpected, as no system can be made fully tight. Organisations are actually organic – Safety emerges continuously from overall behaviour of an organisation’s components, including its people. A good safety record promotes Complacency and allows risks to grow unseen. Political or economical forces can shift organisations shift away from safety. Organisations create the bahaviour they get – Operating within commercial, political, regulatory framework, they tend to drift away from what is actually beneficial for the organisation. Protecting organisations from things that happen – Rules and procedures design to limit system variability may avert accidents to a point but they also prevent beneficial novel behaviour. by: G Sachdeva

  33. 4. Make mistakes Human Traits SUCCESSFUL ORGANISATIONS HAVE FEWER ACCIDENTS BECAUSE • Expertise is developed, retained and exploited. • to achieve greater efficiency, people in organisation identify failure and develop alternate strategies creating minimal safety margins. Expertise and ability to read complex situations and project into future plays a crucial role in their assessment. • Organisation pay attention to their fault lines • The real risk to safety is often in interfaces between different parts of organisation such as charterers, builders, crew, managers etc. Good organisations analyse near misses and accidents for interface faults. • Decision making is based on system thinking • Look for faults in the systems which include PSC, Flag, regulators, Designers, Charterers, managers and the crew. Not just rules. by: G Sachdeva

  34. 4. Make mistakes Human Traits • WHO IS ACCOUNTABLE – AND WHAT CAN BE DONE? • It is normal to make mistakes. • Wider organisation factors are critical in shaping our behaviour. • The industry has now shifted from Blame Culture to Just Culture. • Principles of Just Culture which apply to EVERYONE. • Human error is inevitable and organisation’s policies, processes and interfaces must be continually monitored and improved to accommodate these errors. • Individuals should be accountable for their actions if they knowingly violate safety procedures and policies. by: G Sachdeva

  35. Human Traits 4. Make mistakes • SOME DO’S • Do recognise that mistake making is part of normal human behaviour and is generated in part by organisational systems. • Do look for any downside of cost-oriented changes in your organisation. These will sacrifice thoroughness for efficiency, which leads to more mistakes and less inclination to catch them. • Adopt and implement a JUST culture. It needs transparency at ALL levels and open and honest incident reporting. It will improve safety which transforms in profit taking. SOME DON’T’S • Don’t be misled by the power of hindsight. It is useful to investigators but not as much when actions unfold. • Don’t imagine that there will ever be a rule for every eventuality. Behaviour emerges from complex interactions between people and systems. It is not completely predictable. by: G Sachdeva

  36. Human Traits 5. Get tired & stressed Fatigue and Stress have their causes and consequences. We must always know how to avoid fatigue and stress Workload can be managed with experience even when the job demands are high 6. Learn and develop People learn all the time.. It is important to learn the right thing at the right time. People aspire to learn and the organisation should manage this to enhance safety and profitability. In the absence of good management, these aspirations may dominate or be ignored – bad outcome. 7. Work with others Sometimes we work alone, at other times we work as a team member Key problem is to have people skills as well as technical task skills Things go wrong when these two skills are absent.. 8. Communicate with others Successful communication involves clear transmission, is only part of the story Even with clear transmission, both parties were interpreting different meanings Responsibility of the listener as well as the person sending the message should be understood. . by: G Sachdeva

  37. 5. Get tired & stressed Human Traits REMEMBERING THE EXXON VALDEZ DISASTER In March 1989, Exxon Valdez struck Bligh Reef off Alaska and spilt 11 Million US Gallons of Crude oil into the sea. The slick covered almost 11 thousand square miles of ocean and killed thousand of sea creatures. The local fishing collapsed and many residents committed suicide. Billions of Dollars were spent on cleanup and compensation. At the time of accident, the 25 year old 3rd mate and an able seaman were on bridge. Both had not been given the mandatory 6 hours rest before their 12 hour duty. The Company’s manning policy did not consider the increase in workload caused by reduced manning. by: G Sachdeva

  38. 5. Get tired & stressed Human Traits WHAT CAUSES FATIGUE? • Workload – The harder people work, the sooner they need time to recover. Workload is influenced by design of tools, equipment, procedures, and expertise gained through training and experience. • Sleep debt – This builds up if people do not get enough sleep of the right sort and causes people to misread situations, overlook key information and fall asleep even when this would put them and others to extreme risk. • Perceived risk – If people are stimulated by their sense of risk, they can stay awake and alert longer. If doing tedious or boring jobs then they feel tired sooner. People increase their exposure to risk to stimulate themselves. • Diet – heavier means with carbohydrates encourage drowsiness whereas lighter protein meals induce wake-fullness. • Fitness & Movement – Overweight and non- exercising people feel fatigued earlier. • Time of day – People live by natural daily rhythms. They are least alert during early hours of the morning and most alert before mid-day. • Environment - Environment with poor lights, noise, vibration, temperature and motion cause fatigue. Some aromas such as lemon encourage alertness. by: G Sachdeva

  39. 5. Get tired & stressed Human Traits CASE STUDY – GENERAL CARGO VESSEL ANTARI In June 2008, Ch Officer began his 6 hour watch on Bridge on passage from Corpach to Ghent. As vessel headed south at 11 knots with the west coast of Kintyre peninsula on the port side, the next course change off Mull of Kintyre would be 11 miles away. The Ch Off excused the AB who had done the cargo watch earlier and was needed for deck maintenance as was now alone on the Bridge after taking over from the Master who had done the earlier 6 hour shift. With both wheelhouse doors closed, clear, moonless night. Calm sea and slight westerly winds, the Ch Officer settled in the Pilot Chair next to the ECDIS on the Stbd side, to rest a bit. The watch keeping alarm had been switched off earlier, not to disturb the others. He was soon asleep and woke up after the ship had run aground three hours later. The Ch Officer had not shown any outward signs of fatigue even though he was involved with cargo watch the previous night. The Master know that he had slept between 0230 to 0600 hrs the previous night. Antari had made 21 port calls within last 2 months and every port call required both Master and Ch Officer to be involved. Audits and Statutory Inspections had also taken place along with other Port visitors. Both Master and Ch Officer had been doing 6 on 6 off for some time and a TIME BOMB was ticking in terms of SLEEP DEBT. Not having a second person on bridge made matters worse. AS PER MAIB, 82% GROUNDINGS THAT TAKE PLACE BETWEEN 0000 TO 0600 HRS ARE DUE TO FATUGUE. by: G Sachdeva

  40. 5. Get tired & stressed Human Traits SIGNS OF FATIGUE External Signs: Vacant stare with sunken, bloodshot eyes, Eye strain, sore or heavy eyes, dim or blurred vision, Droning or humming in the ears, Paleness of Skin, Slurred speech, Headaches, Feeling colder than others in the room, Faintness or dizziness, lack of Energy, drowsiness, Unstable posture / swaying, dropping chin, nodding head, loss of muscular strength, stiffness, cramps, loss of manual dexterity, difficulty in making fine movements. Operational Signs: • Degraded mental performance – confusion, poor concentration, narrowed perception, forgetfulness. Leads to poor response to changing situations. • Diminished personal Safety – Reduced self and situation awareness, leading to apathy, less attention to personal hygiene, neglect of normal safety precautions and more risk taking. • Impaired leadership – Take longer or make poorer decisions. Fatigue makes people accept irrational, erroneous or illegal orders or ignore good ones. • Worsening Team Performance – decreased interaction with crew and degraded communication due to lower sensitivity to other people’s needs and aims. Moody, loss of humour, irritable, argumentative, socially withdrawn – all which affects crew relationship. • Decreased Morale – Fatigue decreases satisfaction, motivation and interest in team efforts. Pessimism increases, people thing of the worst scenario, reject group and take offence easily. • Odd Behaviour – People may talk gibberish, neglect routine tasks, have stupid accidents and suffer hallucinations. • 24 hours without sleep is same as 25% over the UK drink-drive limit by: G Sachdeva

  41. 5. Get tired & stressed Human Traits THE 5 STAGES OF SLEEP • Dropping off: Transition stage between wakefulness and light sleep. This stage which is short lived and 5% of your sleep feels like falling off a cliff as muscles suddenly relax. • Light sleep: Accounts for about 50% of the sleep. • Deep Sleep: Progressively deeper sleep where physical and mental recovery takes place. The amount of deep sleep depends on the fatigue experienced before sleep and harder to get up, longer to be fully alert. Disturbance such as loud noise, takes you back to light sleep. • Deep Sleep: Same as above. • REM Sleep: This is the dream stage when muscle and spinal reflexes are maximally suppressed. This stage is critical for mental stability. Lack of REM sleep results in irritability, poor judgment and hallucinations. If sleep deprived then REM sleep occurs on the second night after first night of deep sleep. by: G Sachdeva

  42. 5. Get tired & stressed Human Traits HOW TO AVOID FATIGUE • STICK TO THE RULES: Everyone needs to stick to the work / rest hour regime without fudging records (this offers false security and is often discovered after an incident with disastrous consequences). After Antari grounding investigation, it was found that shipstaff had pre-recorded their work / rest hours irrespective of whether they were working or asleep. • STICK TO THE SPIRIT OF THE RULES: People at all levels of the company and ship must facilitate, support and implement existing work / rest hour regimes. Lip Service does not improve safety. The Organisation culture is important here. • FOLLOW A FATIGUE MANAGEMENT PLAN: THE SHIPOWNER / MANAGER ENSURES: that the ISM Code is clearly communicated, joining crews are adequately rested, proper hand-over is done on crew change, voyage lengths and leave periods are OK, god use of time in port is given for administrative functions and Language barriers, social, cultural and religious isolation is overcome. THE MASTER ENSURES: Owners policies are implemented, Crew loneliness, boredom, higher workload is met, adequate shore leave, onboard recreation and family contact is maintained, effective work/rest arrangements and napping opportunities are provided. by: G Sachdeva

  43. Get tired & stressed Human Traits WORK REST HOURS RULES Mandated by Article 5 of ILO 180: Maxm hours of work shall not exceed – 14 hours in any 24 hr period 72 hours in any seven day period. Minimum hours of rest shall not be less than – 10 hours in any 24 hour period 77 hours in any seven day period. Hours of rest may be divided into no more than 2 periods of which one shall be at least 6 hours. Interval between two consecutive rest period should not be more than 14 hours. Little more flexibility exists in STCW 1978 Section VIII/I Other facts: 66% seafarers work 4 weeks off / 4 weeks on. 50% seafarers work 12 hours on 12 hours off 25% seafarers work 6 hours on / 6 hours off. 200% percent is the probability of an incident in 12 hour shift as compares to 8 hour shift. 40% seafarers think they are in danger to themselves and colleagues due to their working hours 50% reduction in incidents can be achieved by small naps. Most seafarers think that fatigue can be reduced by lesser paperwork and more staff. by: G Sachdeva

  44. 5. Get tired & stressed Human Traits WORK REST HOURS RULES Mandated by Article 5 of ILO 180: Maxm hours of work shall not exceed – 14 hours in any 24 hr period 72 hours in any seven day period. Minimum hours of rest shall not be less than – 10 hours in any 24 hour period 77 hours in any seven day period. Hours of rest may be divided into no more than 2 periods of which one shall be at least 6 hours. Interval between two consecutive rest period should not be more than 14 hours. Little more flexibility exists in STCW 1978 Section VIII/I Other facts: 66% seafarers work 4 weeks off / 4 weeks on. 50% seafarers work 12 hours on 12 hours off 25% seafarers work 6 hours on / 6 hours off. 200% percent is the probability of an incident in 12 hour shift as compares to 8 hour shift. 40% seafarers think they are in danger to themselves and colleagues due to their working hours 50% reduction in incidents can be achieved by small naps. Most seafarers think that fatigue can be reduced by lesser paperwork and more staff. by: G Sachdeva

  45. 6. Learn and develop Human Traits People are always learning. We are doing it right now. We learn by aspiring, copying, comparing, interpreting and practicing. As we learn, we change into different people with newer capabilities. The Organisations have to make sure that with the right guidance, they learn the right things. When organisations invest in training, they take control of their own future. Learning depends on the learner and should be within grasp, interesting, rewarding and direct the learner to new levels of performance and achievement. by: G Sachdeva

  46. 6. Learn and develop Human Traits What is the difference between EDUCATION and TRAINING The aims of both are different. Education widens and extends people’s horizons. It brings a universe of opportunities. Training focuses on response and behaviour to achieve performance standard. It concentrates on a narrow band of a constrained section. Both demand a large increase in a persons mental and behavioral repertoires. by: G Sachdeva

  47. 6. Learn and develop Human Traits FORMAL vs INFORMAL learning Formal learning comes with effective principles. In the absence, most learners learn from colleagues, take shortcuts and learn informally which can lead to unsafe behaviours which may manifest only after an injury or an incident has taken place. People form attitudes about their organisations and the industry. Whatever they learn, they transmit to others, which maintains an overall culture of the organisation. PEOPLE ARE OUR GREATEST ASSET, is true where organisations share their best practices in knowledge, skills and in attitudes focuses on organisations goals. Learning involves deliberate and significant investment of time, money and effort by individuals and organisations. by: G Sachdeva

  48. 6. Learn and develop Human Traits LEARNING and SENSE MAKING Whether learning is formal and deliberate or Informal and automatic, people need to create meaningful mental connection between what they understand and what they are trying to understand. The key difference is in emphasis. In Sense making, the focus is on applying knowledge, skills and attitudes from previous learning to current operations. By doing so, new learning results. In learning, the focus is in using sense making to acquire new knowledge, skill and attitude. By doing so, better sense-making and learning capability results. by: G Sachdeva

  49. 6. Learn and develop Human Traits BENEFITS OF TRAINING TO ORGANISATIONS • Increased organizational performance • Better organizational culture • Reduced staffing problems and operational costs. • THE FOUR STEPS FOR EFFECTIVE TRAINING • Analyse needs – Task identification – Gap identification and solution identification. • Design content – Learner engagement – Knowledge training – Skills training – Trainee feedback. Modes used are Hi Fidelity simulation, CBT, Embedded training, Chalk and Talk etc. • Evaluate results – Trainee satisfaction – Course objectives – Job performance – Organisational performance. • Go to step 1. by: G Sachdeva

  50. 6. Learn and develop Human Traits TEN POINT CHECKLIST FOR ORGANISATIONS • We know what each of our employee needs to be able to do what is expected in a safe and effective manner – because we have a comprehensive competency network. • We know what our employees know because we carry out competency tests in realistic setting within proven framework. • The competency framework we use recognizes that many competencies are interdependent and have to be considered together e:g: ships and shore operations. • The competency framework is connected to our training needs analysis methods and training courses. • The training programs we deliver are based on trainees actual needs by reference to their job they need to do and takes into account their learning styles. • Our training is effective because we assess responses to it immediately after each course, again in a few weeks for retention tests and on the job as part of our regular competency assessments. • We collect data on job performance, productivity, turnover, incident rates and bahaviour, which is then used to evaluate our training programs and strategy. • We understand the training power of communicating by story telling and experience sharing, and, we have created opportunities for doing so in Office and onboard. • We understand that good trainers require subject matter expertise and teaching skills, in terms of structuring, pacing, feedback methods, trainee engagement that accounts for age and skills. • Our trainers have access to a full range of training aids and know how to use hi fi simulation, CBT, part-task training, classroom training, one to one training and refresher training. by: G Sachdeva

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