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Behavior-based safety (BBS) is a method for improving health and safety in the
workplace through influencing people’s thoughts, behaviors, and actions. It combines
data, risk management and best practices to create healthier, more productive working
environments. It’s a relatively new field, so this article will answer common questions so
you can decide if it would be a useful approach for your workplace.
BBS is designed to reduce preventable injuries in the workplace. These are typically
injuries caused by improper equipment or training, lack of awareness, avoidable
situations, or other areas where the right approach, attention, training and resources
can significantly reduce the risk of injury.
The main benefits include ensuring that employees are protected and do not suffer
workplace-related illnesses or injuries. This will enhance productivity and profitability
and reduce the risk of loss due to absence or actions taken against you by injured
employees.
BBS can reduce injuries by up to 80%, and proactive risk management will improve
working conditions, enhance employee morale, and ultimately create a happier
workplace. Dealing with risks early, before they become incidents or issues, is much less
expensive than investigations, compensation, remediation and employee absence.
There are several areas that should be monitored, measured and improved to enhance
BBS:
Data is key to successfully implementing BBS. Employees are typically observed and
measured as they go about day-to-day tasks, across various activities. Behaviors are
scored and analyzed depending on how they contribute to safer or more risky working
practices and compared against actual outcomes.
Once behaviors, activities and outcomes have been analyzed, managers and employees
can work together to create best-practice guidelines based on empirical data. These
guidelines are then formalized into action plans and employees can receive training
based on reducing risk and closing gaps.
Risk assessment is central to BBS. Both managers and employees should understand
any risks to health and safety and assign appropriate priority levels based on likelihood
and impact. Mitigating actions that come from risk assessment should be built into BBS
action plans and tracked in your quality management system.
One example of BBS, risk management and safety performance might be:
● A warehouse picker needs to meet certain criteria for picking and packing a certain
number of items in an hour.
● They are measured and incentivized on these targets, so speed and accuracy are
essential.
● There is tall racking in the warehouse, and items are often placed out of the
employee’s reach.
● The employee cuts corners and climbs on the racking to pick certain items.
● This is a high-risk practice that requires an action plan:
As you can see, BBS can be a useful addition to any workplace. We recommend
combining your BBS training program with a robust EHS system so you can easily
identify, prioritize, track and mitigate health and safety risks.