Abstract

In ‘Ten Pathways to Death and Disaster’ Professor Michael Quinlan (2014) identified a series of ten common catastrophic incident risk factors, known as the Ten Pathways, contributing to major incidents in mining and other high hazard industries. This study applies the Quinlan methodology in two separate phases. The first phase of the study explored employee perception of employer effectiveness of fatality prevention against each of the Ten Pathways through a questionnaire of n = 2009 participants at the 2017–2019 Western Australian Government Mines Safety Roadshows. Respondents generally perceived their employer as having a relatively good understanding of the role of risk assessments and their importance in preventing injuries yet perceived their employers as generally ineffective in management system auditing. In the second phase of the study, 71 fatality reports on the Western Australian Government Department of Mines Fatalities register were assessed to identify the Ten Pathways involved in the fatality. The analysis identified fatalities typically included four or five of the Ten Pathways, although none of the investigations analysed all Ten Pathways. A combined assessment of employee perceptions of employer’s effectiveness at fatality prevention and pathways present in the Mines Fatalities register identified which Quinlan Ten Pathways mining organisations should prioritise for fatality prevention. It is recommended that benchmarking safety performance, incident investigations, and reviews of effectiveness of safety management systems include an examination and verification of the organisation’s response to Ten Pathways, a relatively straight forward task which may highlight latent issues or weaknesses that may otherwise remain undetected.

Highlights

  • In 2019–2020 the West Australian mining industry contributed $135.3 billion Australian dollars to the State economy, approximately 43% of the State GDP (Government of Western Australia, 2021)

  • To achieve this aim the following objectives were established: 1. Use the results of a Quinlan Ten Pathways employee perception questionnaire to develop a profile of West Australian mining industry fatality prevention effectiveness

  • With a mining industry working population of 140,000 (DMIRS, 2020) and using a confidence level of 95%, a 5% margin of error, a represen­ tative sample of the West Australian mining using G Power was 383. This study exceeded this number on each of the three years, and the results are somewhat representative of the West Australian mining in­ dustry, the roles and functions of the participants is unlikely to represent the diversity of mining industry roles

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Summary

Introduction

In 2019–2020 the West Australian mining industry contributed $135.3 billion Australian dollars to the State economy, approximately 43% of the State GDP (Government of Western Australia, 2021). Be­ tween 2000 and 2020 there were 77 mining fatalities reported to the West Australian Government, 15% of all fatalities in WA (Department of Mines Industry Regulation and Safety, 2021; SafeWork Australia, 2020). It appears the West Australian mining industry is overrepresented in the States fatality statistics, and there is room for improvement. The ‘Fatalities register for all Western Australian mining fatalities’ is a collation of fatality incident information from 71 fatalities between January 2000 and December 2018 (DMIRS, 2018) This freely available online Register assists organisations learn from previous. From the fatalities assessed by Quinlan, there was clear evidence of one or more of the ‘ten pathways’ not being effectively addressed by the fatally injured persons employer prior to the incident, and it is suggested that this may have contributed to the causes of the fatality (Quinlan, 2014)

Background
Aims and objectives
West Australian mining industry fatality prevention effectiveness profile
North Region
West Australian mining industry fatalities profile
Combining fatality profiles
Discussion
Informing performance improvement
Auditing
Leadership
Quinlan’s Ten Pathways in past fatalities
Limitations and future direction
Conclusion
Findings
Declaration of Interests
Full Text
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