Incident Investigation Course
English
30-Day Money Back Guarantee
Full Lifetime Access
Self-Paced
Finish in
24 mins!
Finish in
24 mins!
Made for for
Employees
only
Employees
only
Certificate
of Completion
of Completion
Mobile -
Friendly
Access
Friendly
Access
What you'll learn
Define concepts and terms associated with incident investigation
Know why incident investigation and causal analysis are important
Identify why incident investigation matters, when it occurs and who is involved
Know how to apply best practices for gathering information when an incident occurs
Keep asking �why� to perform causal analysis
Recall what to do once investigations are complete
Skills covered in this course
Description
Have you ever heard the old expression that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results? We can apply that expression to safety in the case of companies that keep doing the same things over and over but somehow expect that their workplaces will somehow become safer. The bottom line is that we have to look at what we are doing and figure out how we can improve. That is why we have incident investigation and causal analysis! This course will explain how you can turn safety incidents into opportunities for continuous improvement. You will learn about how to gather information, find underlying causes and take corrective actions. This course is intended for all industries and construction employees, including managers.
Course Objectives:
Define concepts and terms associated with incident investigation;Know why incident investigation and causal analysis are important;Identify why incident investigation matters, when it occurs and who is involved;Know how to apply best practices for gathering information when an incident occurs;Keep asking �why� to perform causal analysis;Recall what to do once investigations are complete
Duration: 24 min.
System Requirements
Microsoft Internet Explorer 10 or higher (11+is preferred), Microsoft Edge, Google Chrome (latest), iPad iOS (latest) (Tablet only), Mac OS 10.10 or 10.11 (PC only) Apple Safari 8 or 9, Android Google Chrome (latest). Course playback is not recommended for mobile phones. For optimal playback, it is also recommended that learners close all other browser windows when viewing a course.
Author
UL empowers organizations to protect the well-being of workers, reduce risk, improve productivity, enhance compliance, and drive measurable business improvement through its learning, health, and safety platforms. More than 2,000 organizations in over 20 major industries including manufacturing, pharmaceutical, healthcare, and construction & energy, trust UL’s software tools and learning solutions to meet their expanding needs. UL's international suite of online courses, built by industry experts and learning specialists, give employees the skills and knowledge they need to stay safe, succeed on the job, and remain in compliance.
Incident Investigation Course
Attachments:
Incident Investigation Job Aid (79 KB)
Have you ever heard the old expression that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results? We can apply that expression to safety in the case of companies that keep doing the same things over and over but somehow expect that their workplaces will somehow become safer. The bottom line is that we have to look at what we are doing and figure out how we can improve. That is why we have incident investigation and causal analysis! This course will explain how you can turn safety incidents into opportunities for continuous improvement. You will learn about how to gather information, find underlying causes and take corrective actions. This course is intended for all industries and construction employees, including managers.
Course Objectives:
Define concepts and terms associated with incident investigation;Know why incident investigation and causal analysis are important;Identify why incident investigation matters, when it occurs and who is involved;Know how to apply best practices for gathering information when an incident occurs;Keep asking �why� to perform causal analysis;Recall what to do once investigations are complete
Duration: 24 min.