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Behaviour change: Improving health and safety performance – Buxton, 24-25 May 2016

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HSL is to run a 2 day course on Behaviour Change: Improving Health and Safety Performance.

24- 25 May 2016

Not all risks can be engineered out of the work
environment.  Even with the best plans, procedures and systems
in place, individuals at work still take short cuts and make
mistakes. Sometimes risk-taking behaviour is intentional, for
whatever reason. In other cases, risks may be taken due to a lack
of understanding about a particular hazard, associated controls or
inadequate training. To individual workers, such risk-taking can
result in injury, ill-health and fatalities. To the
organisation, some of the many costs can include lost time, damage
to machinery, litigation, and prosecution. If unchecked, these
costs can escalate.

This course, delivered by HSL psychologists, will provide you
with an understanding of the many factors that influence both
workers’ and managers’ behaviour. It will also highlight the
strengths and weaknesses of traditional behaviour modification
strategies for correcting unsafe and unhealthy behaviour,
highlighting why such approaches may have limited impact. The
course adopts a five step, holistic approach to behaviour change
(ASCENT – Achieving Safety Culture Excellence Now and Tomorrow) and
concludes with strategies to help reduce the likelihood of risk
taking behaviour for health and safety. It differs from other
courses on this topic by demonstrating how behaviour change,
leadership and worker engagement can be incorporated into the wider
health and safety management system to ensure an integrated, and
therefore more effective approach to risk management. In doing so,
both the immediate and underlying causes of risk-taking can be
tackled head on. These strategies apply as much to manager
behaviour as they do to operational staff.

  • Why people take risks at work

  • The consequences of risk taking for individuals and the
    organisation

  • How to prepare an organisation for a behaviour change
    programme

  • Assessing safety culture and safety climate – use and follow up
    of the Safety
    Climate Tool

  • Strategies for influencing senior management

  • Factors that influence behaviour outlining HSL’s model of
    behaviour change

  • Human failure: errors and violations

  • Strategies to identify the root cause of behaviours

  • Evidence based strategies to encourage safer and healthier
    behaviour, e.g.

    • How to develop persuasive risk communication

    • Worker engagement

    • Leadership development

    • How to impart knowledge

    • Changing habits

    • Mitigating perceptual biases

    • Changing beliefs, values and attitudes

    • Making best use of nudges

    • Developing interpersonal skills

    • Developing situational awareness

  • Evaluating your programme and maintaining change

The course is most appropriate for health and safety managers
with limited knowledge / experience of behaviour change approaches.
However, it will also be relevant to those who have established
behaviour change initiatives but are interested in how the
psychological priniciples of human behaviour can be mapped onto an
integrated health and safety management system.




In our experience whilst this course will prepare delegates to
develop and implement a behaviour change programme, organisations
often find that they want the security of having HSL experts
available to support them through the process and help them tailor
the approach to meet their current context, culture maturity level
and audience.


We will advise and guide you, ‘sense check’ your ideas and
trouble shoot problems that arise by drawing on our wealth of
expertise (both theoretical and practical) and experience of
applying such a process in organisations across industry.  Our
knowledge of what has and has not worked previously for other
organisations can be invaluable.


HSL experts can provide a variety of ‘next step’ solutions to
help kick start your behavioural change programme, including:


1. Delivery of a one hour presentation to your senior management
team outlining HSL’s ASCENT approach to achieving safety culture
excellence.


2. A two hour facilitated exercise encouraging the SMT to
develop an organisational vision and associated values. 
Alternatively, HSL can provide you with a training/facilitation
pack allowing you to run the exercise.


3.  A workshop to explore your leadership capability to
deliver a change programme.


4. Facilitated ‘ask the expert’ session affording you and your
team an opportunity to ask a member of the HSL safety culture team
direct questions about your issues and support in developing your
approach.


5. Facilitated action planning session using gap analysis to
identify what you are currently doing for each of the 5 steps in
the ASCENT process and identify what actions you might consider
taking.


For further information and pricing on this post event
consultation, please email jane.hopkinson@hsl.gsi.gov.uk

 

The course will be run at the HSL laboratory in the spa town of
Buxton. Buxton is in the heart of the Peak District and has good
links to mainline train stations and Manchester International
Airport.

Details of hotels in the Buxton area can be found at www.visitbuxton.co.uk

Cost

The cost of the course is £825 per person (includes course
notes, lunch and refreshments).


Comments & Feedback

“Excellent course, professionally presented, that provided a range
of ideas and approaches as to how we can modify
behaviour.”
Chris Huckle, Rothamsted Research (North
Wyke)

 

 

Book Course

Please note the invoice option is not available within 4
weeks of the course date, or for overseas customers.

For further dates and additional information email: training@hsl.gsi.gov.uk
or contact the Training & Conferences Unit

at HSL directly on +44 (0)1298 218806.


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