Publication
Title
What about nudges in the process industry? Exploring a new safety management tool
Author
Abstract
Since the nineteen sixties, after the successive introductions of safety equipment, standards, inherently safe process designs, sophisticated safety management systems and a suite of process safety indicators, all that remains to be slayed in safe work would seem to be the person centered part. The presence of major hazard and risk control via well-established safety management systems in the process industry offers a unique opportunity to add safety via nudges. Psychology and behavioural economics have already entered the safety science realm. Behaviour-based safety emerged in the early nineteen eighties and is in need of an upgrade. Where conscious behaviour according to unwritten cultural rules and written instructions are not enough for safety, additional manipulation of unconsciously made choices might be used. This principle, which is called a nudge towards desirable behaviour, is already being applied in e.g. traffic control, public space, politics, energy saving, health care and trade practice. Nudging may have uncertainties about its feasibility and magnitude of its effects, might be developed specifically for certain application areas, might raise ethical concerns and hence requires investigation of its application boundaries. The potential of improving safety this way resides in the human error domain and may not only reduce hitherto unaffected unsafe behaviour but also increase rule compliance on legislation, procedures and codes of conduct. This article explores safety nudges and proposes a new safety management tool for influencing behaviour of workers in safety controlled environments in the process industry. Based on currently available evidence, a set of 9 nudge types and an implementation approach are proposed.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Journal of loss prevention in the process industries. - Stoneham
Publication
Stoneham : 2017
ISSN
0950-4230
DOI
10.1016/J.JLP.2017.10.006
Volume/pages
50 :A (2017) , p. 243-256
ISI
000419413600024
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 25.10.2017
Last edited 09.10.2023
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