Towards an Evidence-Based Critical Incidents and Suicides Response Program in Australian Construction
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Impact of Fatal and Non-Fatal Accidents and Suicides
2.2. Organisational Response to Fatal and Non-Fatal Accidents and Suicides
2.3. Research Gaps and Aims
2.4. MATES in the Construction Context
3. Development of the MATES Respond Training Program: Component 1 and Component 2—Rapid Review and Semi-Structured Interviews
3.1. Component 1: Rapid Review
3.2. Component 2: Semi-Structured Interviews
Component 2: Findings
Timeline | Themes | Example Quote |
---|---|---|
Pre-critical incident factors | Impulsivity/risky behaviour | “You can think back on it from any which angle you want, and the guy wasn’t following the rules, did something stupid and that was an accident, but we all handled it as best we could.” (MIC11) |
Personal stressors | “When a guy loses the job and then things starts falling apart and then that’s, and this is what actually what happened with me, it was when I wasn’t working that I was close to suicide because I’d had a lot of things fall apart in my life … So, I would fall on these really hard times because I used to live it up. I used to go out and drink and all that kind of stuff, spend all my money and then all of a sudden, I’d lose my job on a day’s notice and I’m in a really bad position.” (MIC4) | |
“… people who might suicide in construction, I think they already have a pre-existing condition not being able to deal with stress or high levels of stress or whatever that is. A common cause that I’ve seen in suicidal or people who go downhill, have been substance abuse, whether that’s party drugs and/or alcohol. Now, that is not the sole reason, but that’s been a very major contributor, and the four people been close to me who have suicided, the party drugs and alcohol have been heavily involved.” (MIC3) |
- Factors Prior to the CI
Timeline | Themes | Example Quote |
---|---|---|
Pre-critical incident factors | Training and policies for safe machine use | “…critical incidents is an area where you can never probably plan enough… you may only use it once every few years, but when you do kick in the more you plan for it the more you understand it, the better the outcome.” (MIC1) |
“… no matter how messed up or how ugly it is, you know if you can massage the heart and if you can put breath in the body you can sustain life… the ambos said oh, mate we’ll take over from here… and with all their gear and stuff, and they had a look at the wounds and mate they put a sheet on him within, I wouldn’t have thought more than 10 s, 15 s… I was indirectly involved, I suppose, in an incident that resulted in a very serious injury to a guy. He got backed over by a piece of machinery. We weren’t all trained in how to deal with it. There was no incident investigation. He just got struck by a piece of machinery, but now, we ask a lot more questions of people and therefore, we know a lot more about our fellow workers and co-workers. A lot of that’s good, but I think a lot of that we have to be very gentle with it.” (MIC5) | ||
“Technical training in the construction industry is very, very good where you train to look at all the technical aspects of how something works or how it’s stopped working or risk management processes, but when it comes to human element, there should be some training structure in human element.” (MIC5) | ||
Preparedness for CI response | “… it’s one thing to have like a crisis centre set up at a corporate level, but at the remote level beyond head office it’s almost a separate team and response that could, certainly from my business we do need improvement.” (MIC1) | |
“I’ve done a lot of safety in my life. I’m qualified in ICAMs and investigations and incident causation, but I’m not really trained in what to do afterwards… look, they might mention it. It might be something that’s mentioned, it’s briefly discussed, but really it all focuses on why the incident happened and what was the events leading up to it?” (MIC4) |
- Factors During the CI
Timeline | Themes | Example Quote |
---|---|---|
Factors during the event | Narrow focus (auto-pilot) | “It’s really challenging… but… you go into autopilot… and literally you’re breaking down, unfortunately, it probably starts off a bit unemotional… where you’re actually just going in very direct conversations with people: do this, I need that sorted, get the lawyers here, notify the unions, notify the regulators, and you go into autopilot mode of response… That, I find, takes probably an hour to get initial responses up and running, in which case your brain then flicks into standing back away from everything and stepping away from the direct mode into bringing the emotional capacity now of how is everybody doing, and the welfare is now forefront of my mind.” (MIC1) |
Role conflict | “I can see as clearly as I’m looking at you now, workers running, just running and screaming, you better get up there… you know. I see this avalanche of people running away and in that time you’re sort of like thinking oh well that’s not going to be real pretty by the time you get up there but how bad can it be? Well it was fairly ordinary. But after that, you know you’ll be concentrating on your job and you know there was stuff that was happening around me at that particular time, which was like, I should never have put myself in that situation. The load wasn’t secured still, it was whipping around like a snake’s tongue, and there’s like 8 or 10 tonnes laying over your head while you’re trying to drag this body out to actually perform CPR.” (MIC12) | |
Provide referrals | “In terms of how I reacted, it was personally get the workforce together, announce what has occurred in as plain language and directly as possible, here’s the support available to you, but go home and be with your loved ones essentially.” (MIC1) | |
“He did say, ‘hey, look we have counsellors available, these are their numbers’, kind of thing.” (MIC4) |
Timeline | Themes | Example Quote |
---|---|---|
Factors during the event | Emotional demands | “I guess a lot of people ring me going, ‘are you all right?’ but I’d say once again, I wasn’t worried about me, I put me in the background and I was just worried about the individuals that were there and made sure everyone else was okay and did the whole site thing and meeting and do that. I haven’t really dealt with it in that sense.” (MIC9) |
“You wouldn’t go on the cusp of how it’s happened at that point in time because it’s only just happened. You’re more looking at the welfare of the individuals that are on the job at the time, making sure they’re okay.” (MIC9) | ||
Uncertainty (training-reality gaps) | “The guy was a mate of mine and I was the first aider, so I was actually there trying to save his life, which was quite impossible, but I didn’t know that at the time … it goes back to your foundations of training that you learn… and then you know when the ambos got there and with all their gear and stuff, and they had a look at the wounds and mate they put a sheet on him within, I wouldn’t have thought more than 10 s, 15 s.” (MIC12) |
- Factors Following the CI
Timeline | Themes | Example Quote |
---|---|---|
Factors following the critical incident | Emotional surge | “I felt shitty for a while. I felt really bad for the guy’s family, I felt really bad for some of his close workmates so yes, there was a definite effect for a period of time, yes.” (MIC10) |
“This dread sort of like hits you and all this what else could you have done hits you, you know, you’re talking about all the things you should be doing, could’ve done, and it floods you. It’s really fucking overwhelming.” (MIC12) | ||
Continuation of heightened emotional response | “… the whole philosophy that Mates in Construction… use [is] looking out for your mates and that kind of thing but when you [are] busy that tends to fall away and no one on a construction site’s primary role is as the site psychologist… (but) this particular incident was that it brought back memories and things for other people of… other trauma that they’ve had in their life” (MIC10) | |
“It was probably that night when I was down there in the room on my own, stepping back feeling really drained, because it obviously ends up being a big day, really emotionally drained… I probably… it hit home firstly there. Secondly probably two to three weeks later, when a lot of the operational elements are done, the emotion floods through and it’s almost you’re starting to really process what has occurred, in an emotive way, the adrenaline is wearing off, and you’re now actually thinking about everything you’ve had to deal with, what you’ve seen, what you’ve done.” (MIC1) | ||
Empowering individual support decision | “Training and resources that provide multiple opportunities for engagement—peer to peer support, team support, EAP and MIC all working together to acknowledge the needs of people.” (MIC3) | |
“It’s a tough one ‘cause from my experience it’s really hard, I’m trying to have some engaging and deep conversations with men on the jobsite and there are a lot of walls. So, if someone isn’t processing something like that very well, to give them the space to talk and open up.” (MIC4) | ||
“I remember [NAME] taking me home, taking me back to his place and we had a couple of beers. We didn’t talk about the incident, didn’t talk about it. He was just with me, he just stayed with me and he phoned my wife and let [NAME] know that [NAME] has been involved in a very nasty incident, he’s okay but you know he’s the guy that was trying to preserve life, so you know he’s going to be a bit upset or agitated or whatever happens during that time. But I never was, I was more, you just keep flicking over in your head what else could you have done, what else, what else, what else?” (MIC12) | ||
Preoccupation with assigning responsibility | “… You just keep flicking over in your head what else could you have done, what else, what else, what else?” (MIC12) | |
“… then we got a bit of blame for moving him onto a roster and FIFO at his request. One of his mates said, ‘If he stayed up here, I could have looked after him’. So, yeah, you sometimes second guess or doubt yourself, did we do the right thing or not.” (MIC3) | ||
“By the time I got down those conversations had been had, but it was all with our management team and our supervisory staff where again we facilitated a similar discussion just… with our team… Because obviously they’re going through some trauma themselves, because they feel they’ve contributed one way or another indirectly.” (MIC1) |
Timeline | Themes | Example Quote |
---|---|---|
Factors following the critical incident | Close knowledge gaps (training) | “I would love to see MATES in the future working in that, like having another safety net or a support for those people who have lost their job and just checking in with them and helping them cause I think that’s a real, it’s a red zone. It’s a real slippery area where lives, if they fall into that and then drugs and alcohol or whatever, and a fight with the missus and it can really take off from there.” (MIC4) |
“I actually got the defibrillator out after this event and actually showed all the staff how to use it because it was a bit of a complicated process with somebody talking in a, I think it was probably in America or maybe a similar accent to your own, so that actual, in relation to this specific critical incident the equipment used, i.e., the defibrillator, the application of the defibrillator definitely could have been more widely understood throughout the site.” (MIC10) | ||
“Anybody in a managerial role, because we deal with humans all the time, one of the things that we should understand is the basic elements of human behaviour, whether that be understanding body language or understanding how we present ourselves or how we should approach people. There could be training in that area.” (MIC5) | ||
Time limited support | “ … it was like, ‘well, you guys, you know, we still need to pull this thing tomorrow so we’re got to get moving boys kind of thing’. So, it was definitely more so the, like well what I felt was that the job was more important than these lives.” (MIC4) | |
Interviewer: “So do you think there were people there that may have needed that extra support but didn’t really get it or put their hand up?” MIC10: “Yes, I’d say there probably were, yes.” | ||
Return to work pressures | “… the focus was, okay, yes, this bad thing happened but, I always hate when someone says but because it really just means that they’re kind of saying, let’s get back to work.” (MIC4) | |
“We had the union come out and it might have been like we got together in the smoko shed and it might have been like a 5 or 10 min talk and then basically, cause it wasn’t in my direct area, it wasn’t in our direct crew, it was like, ‘well, you guys, you know, we still need to pull this thing tomorrow so we’re got to get moving boys kind of thing’. So, it was definitely more so the, like well what I felt was that the job was more important than these lives.” (MIC4) | ||
Preoccupation with assigning responsibility | “Some people don’t want to be followed up, like I know some people were just like, yes, it’s happened, done, okay, let’s move on and scratching the scab for them was maybe quite painful and maybe not really wanting to go back over it. I for one didn’t want to continually go back over it, I got sick of answering questions about it from management whereas some people would have talked about it every day of the week… So, every different level of management wanted to hear the full story, wanted to know how you felt, blah blah, yes.” (MIC10) | |
“Nowadays, every time there’s a near miss or there’s an incident, there’s a need to understand what happened and you can’t really understand what happened unless you start asking questions and sometimes, I even find that asking questions can be traumatic to people. The whole thing surrounding incidents and, as I said, they don’t have to be serious incidents, it’s depending on the situation, near miss or minor incident, is becoming a very, very delicate subject.” (MIC4) | ||
Barriers to seeking help (stigma, work hours) | “Going back some years ago, people were more linear, I suppose. They either said, ‘Yes, I want some help’ or ‘No’ they didn’t and if they didn’t want help, are probably okay. If they wanted help, they wanted help. But nowadays, I think, there’s a lot more forces at play in the every day of people now. It’s a lot more complicated.” (MIC5) | |
Support may be time-limited and not sufficient for the ongoing trauma experienced by workers | “I had a number of people associated with the business reach out to me personally going, how you doing?… There was initial on the day and the next day, really quick, hey, I understand what you’re dealing with, let me know if I can help in any way… But within two weeks that pretty much disappeared, and it was more, what’s happening with the investigation, what can we learn from it, that was more where the questions turned to.” (MIC1) | |
“I didn’t use the EAP support and I’m not, I think the people who used it were a little bit, I’m not sure about was that good or not. I don’t believe that there was too much follow-up so I think the support that was offered and the support was provided varied in its effectiveness.” (MIC10) | ||
Perceived pressure to return to work | “You didn’t really have time to dwell on anything. It’s an issue. It happened. Close it out. Move on. So, you don’t have time to dwell on critical incidents, if you want to call them that.” (MIC3) | |
Culture affects recovery and people seeking help | “If [support] was there and it was during worktime because you’ve just gone through a fatality or something, I reckon people would have more interest in it because I guess in—I’ll say using my own brain, but I’ve just gone to a traumatic event that’s a part of my job, I then am going to now take time off out of my time, I’m not going to get paid, so I never did it. I just went there and did what I had to do as what I was employed to do. Now I’m going to suffer the consequences. I’m going to lose out on something I had nothing to do with. Whereas if you turn that around and go we’ll pay you and you find them and we’ll pay you to go there and it’s half day on a Friday.” (MIC9) | |
“… to take time out, or expect someone to make a proactive appointment with their GP (General Practitioner), was not always part of the culture.” (MIC6) | ||
“I think for any high stress level job it should be mandatory to go see whether they pay for a psychologist twice a year or a psychiatrist or whatever you need to see or just a counsellor, that should be mandatory because at the end of the day, if you don’t want to do something, and it has proved back that if you don’t want to do it you’ll find any excuse under the sun not to do it.” (MIC9) | ||
Ongoing support varies on an individual basis | “Maybe the theoretical answer goes back to which box everybody sits in psychologically and how they’re wired and how they deal with stress. I think that the people who were closely involved in this, well the guy that was most closely involved in the incident, the first guy that did CPR, the first responder, our project safety officer, he seemed to deal with it the best and didn’t want any EAP assistance and we have a quick chat about it but he was an older guy and he just moved on with what he needed to do. Whereas other guys that were in the second responder or helped out a little bit later on category, they were the guys that had other issues that doubled up in their lived about their parents and whatever else came out in the slightly longer term. I think if your personal life, home life, wife, kids, partners, dog, if everything is going well in your life, it’s quite, it’s easier to process and event like this and from personal experience if all that other stuff’s, even in the absence of a critical incident like this, if the other stuff in your life, if you’ve got a couple issues going on the background, then it’s much harder to focus and an incident like this probably does make you think its all doom and gloom possible.” (MIC10) | |
Focus on people over equipment | “[the Managing Director passed on this message]: ‘We can get another truck, we can’t get another you. Don’t dwell on it. We’ll look after you.’ That’s about all it took, but those sort of situations are rare.” (MIC9) |
- Suicide-Specific Data
3.3. Summary of Interview and Rapid Review Insights: Transition to Component 3
4. Development of the MATES Respond Training Program: Component 3—Content Analysis of Site Notes
4.1. Findings
4.1.1. Stage 1: Planning the Response
4.1.2. Stage 2: During the Response
- Emphasising our sympathy for losing their workmate.
- Emotions and feelings, and normalising these.
- Looking out for changes in co-workers and approaching them.
- The ripple effect—may bring back one’s own feelings.
- Taking breaks if needed—with the project manager and union delegate’s permission.
- Here on—home, normality of actions, normal lifestyle things.
- Keeping in touch with mates/family/friends.
- Particular mention of holiday periods and possible ramifications.
- Emphasising strategies for comfort—MATES 1300#, EAP, GP, each other and others.
- Emphasising MATES commitment—reaffirmed the use of 1300# (also mentioned in emergency/life-threatening situations—to call 000).
4.1.3. Stage 3: Post-Response
5. Overview of the MATES in Construction Respond Training Program
5.1. Connecting with the Event
5.2. Understanding the Event
5.3. Assisting Workers and the Site
6. Overall Discussion
7. Future Research and Limitations
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Stage | Actions | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Planning the response | Details about the incident itself: The MATES Support Team needs to know details about the event itself, including date, time, location, workers directly involved, and whether a critical incident or postvention response is required, depending on the nature of the event. | Date, time, and location of response: Information about the date, time, and location is necessary to coordinate responses adequately. In some cases, a coordinated response is required across multiple locations, as workers directly involved in the incident may be part of teams that work across multiple locations. In other cases, it is also necessary to coordinate multiple responses when workers are temporally or geographically dispersed (e.g., when one shift begins in the early morning and another in the afternoon). | Workers involved in the response: The MATES Support Team needs to know which workers were involved in the incident and how many workers will require support. Contextual information is needed to understand site dynamics, complex relationships, and whether varying levels or types of support will need to be provided. For example, many responses combine a public address involving all available workers on site, with a more private session involving a smaller number of workers who worked more closely with those directly involved in the incident. | |
During the response | Public address to a group of workers: Critical incident and postvention responses often involve a public address delivered to groups of workers; the size of these groups depends on the size of the worksite and varies for postventions. These public addresses usually involve all available workers on site, irrespective of how close they were to the individuals directly involved in the incident, and are convened in a public location on the worksite. An address usually takes the form of a toolbox talk at pre-start or during lunch. | Remaining onsite for one-on-one conversations: As already mentioned, the MATES Support Team generally remains onsite to greet workers and provide an onsite presence for anyone who wishes to have a private conversation about the incident or seek further advice and support. | Distribution of MATES contact details: While onsite, the MATES Support Team also distribute items containing MATES contact details, such as flyers, pens, magnets, posters, and stickers. In addition to distributing these directly to workers, they are left in public areas for workers to access at a later date. | Additional support: There is commonly a need to offer information and support to individuals or small groups who were closer to the worker involved in the CI. This will expand to ad hoc, one-on-one support and time for more private discussion. Additionally, information about training and support programs and resources are provided along with referrals when requested. |
Post-response | Follow-up actions: The MATES Support Team plan follow-up actions, including returning to the site at a later date to check-in with how workers are doing, following up on appointments that were made, and attending future planned fundraising events and anniversaries. In some cases, the deceased person worked across multiple worksites, and additional site visits are arranged as part of the response. While most site notes suggested a typical pattern of addressing all available staff in a public setting prior to engaging with a smaller group of staff in a more private setting, the complexities of relationships among different groups of workgroups or logistical difficulties meant deviations from the usual planned protocol were needed. | Documentation and reporting: The MATES Support Team documents the details of the incident and their response in a report. This report includes information about the incident, the response, and any required follow-up actions. | Debriefing: The site notes indicated that the MATES Support Team providing the response often engaged in their own debriefing session with colleagues, site contacts, and professionals affiliated with the response to discuss how things went. |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Biggs, A.; Townsend, K.; Loudoun, R.; Robertson, A.; Mason, J.; Maple, M.; Lacey, J.; Thompson, N. Towards an Evidence-Based Critical Incidents and Suicides Response Program in Australian Construction. Buildings 2024, 14, 2797. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14092797
Biggs A, Townsend K, Loudoun R, Robertson A, Mason J, Maple M, Lacey J, Thompson N. Towards an Evidence-Based Critical Incidents and Suicides Response Program in Australian Construction. Buildings. 2024; 14(9):2797. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14092797
Chicago/Turabian StyleBiggs, Amanda, Keith Townsend, Rebecca Loudoun, Adam Robertson, Jemima Mason, Myfanwy Maple, James Lacey, and Nicholas Thompson. 2024. "Towards an Evidence-Based Critical Incidents and Suicides Response Program in Australian Construction" Buildings 14, no. 9: 2797. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14092797
APA StyleBiggs, A., Townsend, K., Loudoun, R., Robertson, A., Mason, J., Maple, M., Lacey, J., & Thompson, N. (2024). Towards an Evidence-Based Critical Incidents and Suicides Response Program in Australian Construction. Buildings, 14(9), 2797. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14092797