Take 5 – hero or villain

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
E Humphries M Hassall
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
4
File Size:
1068 KB
Publication Date:
Apr 16, 2024

Abstract

Personal risk assessment processes, also known as Take 5 or SLAM (Stop, Look, Assess, Manage) have been utilised in high hazard industries for over 30 years. However, there is limited research to understand if a personal risk assessment process improves safety and health outcomes. The author’s learnings during discussions with training participants in G3/G-MIRM (Risk Management Systems) and G2 (Risk Assessment for Supervisors) courses have provided them with significant insight into understanding if a personal risk assessment process is valued across a number of mining industry organisations. These discussions arise when the four-layer model is presented (Figure 1) where ‘Layer 4’ represents the last resort risk checking activity. In this context, training participants agree that this process has value. However, the consistent opinion is that the personal risk assessment process is not effective, that it is a ‘tick and flick exercise’ and is not achieving the desired outcomes.
Citation

APA: E Humphries M Hassall  (2024)  Take 5 – hero or villain

MLA: E Humphries M Hassall Take 5 – hero or villain. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2024.

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