Objectives - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Objectives

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... or providing service to the public Evolution of firefighting tactics means fire fighters are less likely to be ... CRM helps get maximum and safe performance ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Objectives


1
Introduction
  • Chapter 1

2
Objectives
  • Define crew resource management.
  • Describe how to achieve collective situational
    awareness.
  • Describe the humanware component.

3
Introduction (1 of 2)
  • Questions asked after a major incident where a
    bad outcome causes an investigation
  • Why dont team members speak up when they
    perceive something differently from how a group
    of their peers do?
  • What are the effects of a hierarchical system on
    team performance?

4
Introduction (2 of 2)
  • Questions (continued)
  • How can barriers be broken down to achieve
    collective situational awareness during critical
    events?
  • How do veterans operate and perceive their
    surroundings differently from the way novices do?
  • What are the internal cultural barriers that
    impede optimal team performance?

5
By the Numbers (1 of 9)
  • One strategy integrated into emergency service
    team performance has been CRM.
  • First developed and implemented by commercial
    airlines
  • Many agencies and organizations have attempted to
    implement programs that rely on CRM principles.

6
By the Numbers (2 of 9)
  • Of the 11 agencies that received CRM training,
    only 3 were effectively using CRM after two
    years.
  • Lack of commitment by leadership
  • Lack of follow-up training
  • Failure to implement nonpunitive methods for
    dealing with accidents, errors, and members who
    spoke openly about concerns

7
By the Numbers (3 of 9)
  • U.S. fire service experiences 100 line-of-duty
    deaths and 100,000 lost-time injuries per year.
  • Line-of-duty death fatality to an emergency
    worker during the course of responding to,
    training for, or providing service to the public
  • Evolution of firefighting tactics means fire
    fighters are less likely to be killed and injured
    by flames, smoke, or heat.

8
By the Numbers (4 of 9)
  • NIOSH fire fighter line-of-duty death reports
    list these contributing factors
  • Communication failure
  • Poor decision making
  • Lack of situational awareness
  • Poor task allocation
  • Leadership failures

9
By the Numbers (5 of 9)
  • EMS errors made in patient care could be
    contained by implementing CRM techniques in
    high-risk, low-frequency procedures conducted in
    the field.
  • The number of medications on EMS vehicles is
    getting more attention.
  • U.S. FDA received 20,000 reports of medication
    errors (prehospital and in-hospital) from
    19922002.

10
By the Numbers (6 of 9)
  • Extremes of fire behavior in wildland/urban
    interface make CRM more valuable.
  • Buildup of natural fuels, scant controlled
    mitigation of fire risks, and characteristics of
    communities lead to situations requiring critical
    interagency cooperation and communication.
  • CRM can be effective in overcoming the changing
    environment.

11
By the Numbers (7 of 9)
  • The aeromedical industry is still one of the most
    dangerous professions.
  • The rate of helicopter crashes is alarming.
  • Cost-benefit ratio and medical necessity of
    evacuation by helicopter is still debated.
  • Safe practices should be universal.
  • Pilots say the largest barrier to safety is lack
    of commitment by administrators to provide
    ongoing training and education.

12
By the Numbers (8 of 9)
  • When the U.S. Coast Guard applied CRM to its air
    operations, crashes and accidents were reduced by
    70 percent.
  • Safety is a human issue affected by
  • Cultural change
  • Error trapping
  • Ensured high reliability

13
By the Numbers (9 of 9)
  • Source Adapted from NFPA, Fire Analysis and
    Research Division, Fire Fighter Fatalities in the
    U.S., July 2009.

14
Humanware (1 of 7)
  • Define the issue and deploy humanware,
    software, and hardware to solve the problem.
  • Software implementation rewriting training
    manuals or operating guidelines
  • Hardware solutions building construction
    modifications
  • Humanware people who are part of a team directed
    to solve a problem

15
Humanware (2 of 7)
16
Humanware (3 of 7)
  • ICS is used in managing emergency incidents to
    help identify incident needs and priorities.
  • ICS lets leaders and managers deploy resources in
    a structured, objective manner by
  • Identifying roles and responsibilities
  • Outlining clear lines of communication
  • Limiting span of control
  • Providing methods for expanding the incident

17
Humanware (4 of 7)
  • Some incidents used an outstanding ICS structure,
    but injury or death occurred because of poor
  • Resource allocation
  • Communication
  • Incident management

18
Humanware (5 of 7)
  • CRM provides behavioral expectations for the
    humanware involved in the incident.
  • Highlights areas where team communication breaks
    down by
  • Seeking input
  • Acknowledging communication
  • Respectfully providing differing opinions
  • Resolving conflict
  • Monitoring a decision

19
Humanware (6 of 7)
  • Implementing CRM provides a safer environment in
    the field and results in team members having a
    greater understanding of mission goals and
    objectives.
  • CRM helps get maximum and safe performance from
    all personnel.

20
Humanware (7 of 7)
  • Synergistic situational awareness is possible if
    all team members understand
  • The mission
  • The dangers
  • Their strengths and weaknesses
  • Their role in team communications

21
Preparing for CRM (1 of 3)
  • CRM concepts are embraced when they are
    introduced.
  • CRM requires
  • Open and honest communication
  • Immediate analysis of alternate probabilities
  • Reliance on each team members strengths

22
Preparing for CRM (2 of 3)
  • Once CRM is adopted, implementation is more
    difficult.
  • Preparation includes training personnel in
    techniques of open communication
  • A comprehensive approach to identifying and
    tracking errors and mistakes
  • Conflict management training and education
  • Teaching the power of organizational stories

23
Preparing for CRM (3 of 3)
24
Summary (1 of 2)
  • CRM requires open and honest communication,
    immediate analysis of alternate probabilities,
    and a reliance on the strengths that each team
    member intrinsically brings to the team.

25
Summary (2 of 2)
  • Implementing the principles of CRM can provide a
    much safer environment in the field and will
    result in a greater understanding of the mission
    goals and objectives.
  • An organization that has prepared its employees
    for CRM also has developed a strong foundation so
    that the CRM principles will thrive.
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