4.1. The Categorisation of Safety Reforms
One objective of this study was to design and test an approach to analyse reforms suggested in event investigations. The scope of application was limited to investigations from organisational activities, such as industry and health care. The object of the analysis was the documented summaries of proposed safety measures. The focus was on two characteristics:
A description of the procedure for categorisation is given in
Section 2.1, which includes codes for classification (
Table 1 and
Table 2). In order to support the coding, a few rules were formulated. The results of the coding can be seen, e.g., in
Table 4 and
Table 5. The coding was made in a few steps, and a preliminary version was done by the author. This was checked by two specialists from occupational safety and patient safety, in order to improve the quality of the outcome.
Sometimes, ambiguity concerned the coding of organisational levels. This could often be solved by the coding rules. The remaining issues could depend on the fact that organisations often are composed of units related to production and others with specialised functions. Other uncertainties were related to the involvement of separate organisations or subcontractors. The organisational complexity is illustrated in
Table 3, which shows that between 10 and 18 actors were identified in each investigation. In Set 3, the organisational structure was found to differ from what had been anticipated, which led to several corrections, mainly from Levels 6 to 5.
Issues regarding the type of reform were somewhat less common. Reforms could refer to more than one category at the same time, or they could be indistinct. The coding rules gave some guidance, but not always.
The basic coding problem was related to the misinterpretation of levels in Set 3. Excluding that, it was found that on average about 10% of the codes were brought to discussion by the specialists. As a final result, slightly more than five percent were changed. In
Table 4 and
Table 5, it can be seen that only a few got code nine, indicating that they did not fit in the scheme. The common reason was that they were described too vaguely. As a whole, it can be concluded that the methodology worked well for categorisation of proposed reforms.
Improvements for potential future applications of the methodology could be more clear classification descriptions and rules. One example for the parameter ‘type’ is to add one category, which includes a combination of both production and safety. One lesson is that it could be advantageous to map the organisation involved before starting the coding process, considering that many actors often are involved.
4.2. Analysis of Suggested Reforms
One important aim of most event investigations is to propose safety improvements. All the studied investigation reports have given several suggestions for reforms. With a focus on the reforms, these can be analysed independently of the investigation approach.
Section 2.1 describes the analysis and categorisations made, and how this has been applied to the investigations in Sets 1, 2, and 3. The parameters of special interest have been types of reforms and the level responsible for their accomplishment.
4.2.1. Organisational Levels of Reforms
The study has included an analysis of how the responsibility for reforms was addressed. This is based on the hierarchical categorisation presented in
Table 1. A detailed account for Sets 1 and Set 2 is given in
Table 4, which is based on the combined method approach. A summary has also been made for Set 3 based on the standard Swedish method.
Table 8 presents the mean values for organisational levels for the three sets.
There is an obvious difference concerning the number of proposed reforms. The combined method approach in Sets 1 and 2 generated considerably more suggestions than the standard Swedish method. When Sets 1 and 2 are compared, the following are observed:
The health care investigations suggested several reforms (11%) that should be made at the national level (Code 1);
The industry has the majority of reforms focused on Level 4, which here means factory level (49%);
For health care, the largest proportion (39%) concerns Level 5—here a health care department.
In comparing Sets 2 and 3, the following are noted:
The mean value for suggested reforms is eight times higher in Set 2;
In Set 2, a large part of the suggestions addresses the higher Levels 1 and 3 (47%), while Set 3 has just 1%;
Both sets have a majority of their reforms at Level 5.
For all three sets,
Table 8 shows that there are no reforms addressing Levels 2 and 7. A tentative conclusion is that associations (Level 2) are not considered important stakeholders in the prevention of accidents, neither in the industry nor in health care.
4.2.2. Types of Suggested Reform
In analogy with the previous table,
Table 9 presents mean values for the classification of types of reforms for all three sets. Comparing Set 1 and Set 2 by type, the following are observed:
The largest type of reform is ‘safety management’ in both sets, and it is especially high for Industry;
For Health care, there is a large proportion of ‘investigate and explore’ and ‘rules and instructions’;
The type ‘production planning’ is fairly high in both sets;
The type ‘human resources’ is small in both sets.
Sets 2 and 3 both belong to the health care sector, but they show considerable dissimilarity. The following are observed:
The dominant type in Set 3 is Production planning¸ with more than half of the suggestions. This type of reform concerns work tasks and procedures. The suggestions were usually concrete descriptions of how changes should or could be made;
The dominant type in Set 2 is ‘safety management’, which is almost missing in Set 3;
In Set 3, the type ‘human resources’ is fairly common, in contrast to Set 2.
In Set 3, the types ‘human resources’ and ‘production planning’ add up to 66%, which is more than twice that in the other sets. One interpretation is that the investigations in Set 3 have a focus on professional medical issues of how they shall be performed. That can in turn imply that other aspects are disregarded or taken for granted.
The dominant presence of safety management in industrial cases is likely to be explained by the strong position of occupational safety in Sweden. There is a long tradition with obvious stakeholders and clear demands for a well-functioning system.
4.2.3. Broader Comparison
The analysis of the suggested reforms can be compared with results from the research of Wrigstad et al. (2014). They examined event investigations, which had been conducted with the same methodology as in Set 3, which here is called the standard Swedish method [
22].
The study included 55 investigations with a total of 289 separate recommendations. These were analysed according to whom the recommendations were addressed. It was based on a categorisation into three organisational hierarchical levels—micro, meso, and macro. This categorisation differs somewhat from the one used above (
Table 1), as it is broader. However, a translation can be made in order to make some comparisons [
27]. Macro corresponds well to Levels 1, 2, and 3 in
Table 1. The translation to meso and micro is rather uncertain; especially the reforms belonging to Level 5 could come in either of these. In order to make a tentative comparison, Meso is supposed to include Levels 4 and 5, and Micro Levels 6 and 7.
The distribution between the macro, meso, and micro levels is presented in
Table 10. The last column gives results from the study by Wrigstad et al. (2014). An interesting observation concerns the investigations from the health care sector, where both SSM sets have low values at the macro level, while investigations from Set 2 ‘health care’ score high here. Due to the uncertainties in the translation, there is no basis for conclusions about differences between meso and macro in Sets 1, 2, and 3.
Another way to scrutinise recommendations is to consider their ‘strength’. An examination of 227 event investigations in health care has been performed with a focus on the strength of recommendations [
14]. The investigations were based on a root cause analysis approach. The recommendations were classified based on criteria from the US Department of Veteran Affairs. A division was made in ‘strong’ (likely to be effective and sustainable), ‘medium’ (possibly effective and sustainable), and ‘weak’ (less likely to be effective and sustainable). In the study, 1137 recommendations were examined, and it was found that 8% were ‘strong’, 44% ‘medium’, and 48% were ‘weak’. On average, there were five reforms per investigation, which happened to be almost identical to the sample in Wrigstad et al. (2014).
Canham et al. (2018) have studied the investigation of a specific medication error using two separate methods. Initially, the event was examined with a root cause analysis (RCA) approach. This was followed by an analysis applying the systems theoretic accident modelling and processes (STAMP) approach [
28]. The authors found that it leads to a clearly enhanced consideration of system design issues and improvements, ‘going beyond the individual–based actions proposed by the RCA’.
4.3. Comparisons of Industrial and Health Care Cases
One intent of this paper is to study event investigations from industrial and patient safety contexts in order to explore similarities and differences.
Table 3,
Table 4 and
Table 5 have shown results from the seven investigations using the combined method approach (CMA) described in
Section 2.3.
Although the case studies were few and sometimes showed large variations, it can be interesting to compare mean values for the two sets.
Table 11 gives average values for some of the parameters. The average number of identified actors became the same. For identified events and suggested reforms, the mean values were about 70% higher for the industrial cases.
The average number of deviations and safety functions (SFs) were fairly similar. The number of SFs was high for all cases, ranging between 49 and 83 (
Table 7), with a somewhat higher mean value for the industrial cases. Accounts of the deviations were fairly similar. In both sets, the proportion of deviations assessed as in need of improvement was high-around 90%. The author’s interpretation is that most of the identified deviations were seen as essential to explaining the studied event. Lists of deviations are the basis for the development of reforms, according to the procedure in deviation analysis.
The large number of safety functions supports the concept that safety is composed of complex interactions between various functions in the organisation. However, functionality has been low in both sectors. The proportion of SFs performing well or partly well was on average 35% for the industry. In health care, it was higher (52%), which partly can be explained by the selection of cases. In the health care cases, near-accidents were investigated, and the accident sequence was interrupted because some important SFs really worked.
In the individual investigations, data from the SF-analysis was used in the development of reforms. The main strategy then is to find ways to strengthen weak SFs; sometimes it could be more meaningful to remove a poor SF. In short, it is not meaningful to add new safety features when the current ones do not work.
One major difference between the two branches was that the reference teams in the industry had been assigned to the task by company management, which meant that they had time available. In the health care cases, participation was voluntary. The participants were highly positive about taking part, but it was sometimes hard to find time for the meetings. This can partly explain why suggested reforms were fewer in the health care cases, not just that there were differences between the sectors.
4.4. Comparisons and Interpretations
4.4.1. Summing up the Industrial and Health Care Cases
The analysis shows that the combined method approach performed similarly in industrial and health care contexts. There are variations within the two sets and the samples are small, so general comparisons are only indicative. The mean values for identified deviations and for the proportion that calls for improvements (90%) are very similar. Moreover, the numbers of safety functions are comparable, and the proportion that worked was fairly small (35–55%).
Differences are that the industrial cases found more events on average (73% more) and also proposed more reforms (71%). This could partly be explained by a larger commitment to the investigations in the industrial cases. There are also variations in the distribution of types and hierarchical levels, which are commented upon in relation to
Table 8 and
Table 9.
4.4.2. Summing up the Health Care Cases
For the Sets 2 and 3 investigations in the health care sector, there are methodological differences, which have been of special interest. An analysis of suggested reforms was performed in detail in
Section 4.2. Here, the differences are evident. The average number of suggested reforms per investigation varies considerably (
Table 10). Set 2 has a mean value of 63, which comes eight times higher than Set 3, and 13 times higher than Set 4, which corresponds to results from Wrigstad et al. (2014).
The other large difference concerns the organisational level of reforms, where Set 2 mainly addresses the higher levels (47%), but scores zero at the local level (
Table 10). By contrast, Set 3 has a majority of reforms at the local level (76%) and 1% at the highest levels. The finding that the standard Swedish method tends to generate local reforms is in line with the results of Wrigstad et al. (2014).
Other dissimilarities relate to the type of reforms (see
Table 9). In Set 2, there is a focus on ‘safety management’ and ‘investigations’. By contrast, Set 3 addresses ‘production planning’ and ‘human resources’.
4.4.3. Theoretical Considerations
The differences between the results could be due to a combination of explanations, mainly related to the investigation methodology. In this study, results from two models for event investigations have been compared. The standard Swedish method [
22] is based on the root cause analysis concept, which pronounces causal relationships. The method manual states that you should continue to ask ‘Why?’ for as long as possible.
Several authors [
2,
3,
29,
30] have raised principal objections to the interpretation of causes in event investigations. One argument is that ‘causes’ are not sufficiently objective in explaining the course of an event. In an environment with many activities and actors, relationships and causalities are complex to interpret, especially when probabilities for various outcomes are low and hard to predict.
In the combined method approach (CMA), the studied event is seen from different perspectives, and there is no emphasis on causality. This also means that improvements can be suggested from different standpoints, and thereby cover broader aspects. Here having a reference team was important because its members had a long experience of many earlier situations that are seldom documented.
The role and experience of the investigators are essential to the results. When investigators are all from the same organisation and of similar professional backgrounds, the perception of problems and possible solutions might be too narrow or conservative. There could also be dilemmas with the examination of actions by colleagues and of management in your own organisation.
4.4.4. Usefulness of Thorough Investigations
Results from the CMA and SSM investigations show the following two distinctive differences:
- (1)
The number of reforms per investigation is around 10 times higher for CMA;
- (2)
CMA addresses higher organisational levels, while SSM is aimed at mainly the local level.
How useful are more comprehensive suggestions in reality? Broader types of results give a foundation to consider the whole system, and thereby make for more holistic and efficient safety work. However, an argument against having many reforms is that it may be hard to get them implemented. This is especially the case when higher organisational levels are involved.
This raises the issue of implementation. In the studied investigations, the responsibility for accomplishing the reforms was clearly stated. A general impression is that all suggestions have been considered, but information about implementation and real effects has not been available.
The implementation of suggested reforms has been examined by Wrigstad et al. (2014) in the health care area. For the specific cases, they found that reported action was taken for 44% of the reforms. At the highest organisational levels, the implementation rate was 14%. In the same study, the authors searched in vain for a proper system for recording actions based on incident investigations. These findings of low implementation underline the importance of a proper context if event investigations shall be of use and help for a learning organisation.
4.5. Event Investigation Improvements
It should be noted that this study did not address the quality of the investigations and of the reforms. A wider scope could concern the potential effects of suggested reforms, how feasible they are, and what practical actions the proposals led to. However, the available information did not provide a basis for such studies. Such a wider perspective is a challenge for future research.
Several authors [
2,
3,
4,
13] have pointed to a need for improving the use of and learning from event investigations. A number of general guidelines for such investigations [
8,
23,
31] have given advice on how to consider various aspects. Based on this study, the author wants to highlight the following specific issues:
- (1)
Decisions about event investigations;
- (2)
Accomplishment of investigations;
- (3)
Decisions and accomplishment of reforms;
- (4)
Integration of information and learning.
In the account earlier, there has been a focus on point 2 and the characteristics of event investigations, but here the scope is widened.
- (1)
Decisions about Event Investigations:
This point deals with the role event investigations shall have in safety work. It concerns which events shall be investigated, by whom, with what methodology, and how the results shall be handled. The purpose of the investigations can be to improve safety in the whole organisation or be limited to local and temporary problems. If the first aim is essential, there is a need to consider the whole investigation framework.
The first issue is which events should be investigated. Legal and ethical demands should be met, but there are possibilities to go further. One recommendation [
4] is to perform fewer but deeper investigations. One example lies in the CMA investigations presented here, which provided substantially deepened information about what could be improved.
In order to facilitate understanding of systems errors, these ‘deep’ investigations can also be made of incidents without injuries. In serious accidents, there is a stigma, and sometimes feelings of guilt or even fear, which affects both witnesses and decision makers. The results of Set 2, which were based on incidents, prove that this approach can be successful.
- (2)
Accomplishment of Investigations
The performance of an investigation should match its goal and scope. As shown above, the choice of methods will affect the information obtained and the type of reform. The choice stands between using the usual method, applying a new method, or using a combination of methods. Because there may be several stakeholders when an incident has occurred, the credibility of the investigation is essential. One aspect is that the investigators should be impartial, and another is that the investigation process is systematic and transparent.
- (3)
Decisions and Accomplishment of Reforms
If the investigators are supposed to be impartial, it is an advantage if they make recommendations but not take decisions on implementation. In order to maintain the integrity of investigations, there is a need for a clear process and guideline on how decisions should be made and implemented. Of course, decisions to reject suggestions must also be made because all might not be good and meaningful.
Suggested reforms at higher organisational levels are of special interest because their impact can be considerable. Event investigations addressing higher levels need special attention, and a forum to discuss them impartially could be advantageous.
- (4)
Integration of Information and Learning
Event investigations can be used to collect a large body of information on problems and suggestions for improvements. If this is carried out in a systematic way, it will create a useful knowledge base and improve organisational learning with regard to safety. Within the health care sector, several authors [
4,
13] have stated the need for improvements in that respect. This conclusion is probably also valid for industrial organisations.