Avoiding The Dirty Dozen on the Fire Scene


Gordon Dupont wrote an interesting artcile on Human Factors and how to avoid the dirty dozen, in relation to the aviation industry.

Check it out at:
http://www.ihst.org/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=ciDdCM%2FClnw%3D&tabid=1784&language=en-US

These are the 12 contributing factors that can set you up to make an error no matter what your occupation and can easily be adpated to the fire scene. Consider the following:

1) Lack of communication. Communicaiton must be the number one goal of the OIC of the fire scene. Assess the scene, plan your attack and communicate it to the team, Communicate what the goal is, what the safety issues are, what safety measures are in palce and so on. Communication must go through all levels and to all members on scene.

2) Complacency. Complacency can come about for a number of reasons- over confidence, lack of understanding, lack of training, lack of experience and many others. We must train like it's the real thing. We must never stop training and we must never stop learning. The crusty old farts can still learn something, especially with changing technology in the fire service, changing strucural features, changing car technology and on and on it goes. We must never become compalcent in our responses. Evey alarm must be treated as though it's going to be the real thing when we get there.

3) Lack of knowledge. From the crusty old fart, to the new recruit, knowledge is everything. As a newbie, abosrb it, act like a sponge and soak it up. For the crusties, share it and never assume you know everything- it's impossible! There's some amazingly knoweledgable people on these discussion forums, yet when you read through many of their repsonses, even they respond with, "I didn't know that". To the crusties that won't train- get off your arse and stop being so arrogant! Or move on, the fire service of today has no place for people with your attitude.

4) Distraction. If it takes your mind off the job, then it's a dangerous distraction. And don't become tunnel visioned with the possible rescue that you could make and lose sight of the rate of fire spread, type of structure involved and resources available. Distractions can come from many areas- the homefront, station politics, friends, family, work, fatigue and many others- beware of them and keep your mind on the job.

5) Lack of Teamwork. We often site the brotherhood, yet we often lose site of it. Everything we do on the fire scene revolves around teamwork. There is no "I" in teamwork. Look out for each other, watch each others back, think safety of you and your team. We have many milestones or goals to achieve on the firescene and we must be able to rely on each other to acheive them.

6) Fatigue. Shiftwork has been well researched as dangerous, especially when shifts keep changing. For vols, beware of the hours you work and then the hours you respond. There is no place for fatigue when driving to the station, driving to the scene, advancing the hoseline, performing a rescue, undertaking salvage, etc. There are multiple dangers present through each phase- don't let fatigue distract you or drop your sense of awareness.

7) Lack of Resources. If you don't have the right resources at the scene to undertake a particular task safely, then don't do it! Simple. If you don't have a mutual aid agreement in place to be able to call on additional resources (and the right resources for the task), then do it! Simple. If you don't have the right PPE, then get it! Simple.

8) Pressure. Pressure comes form many sources, just like distraction. Learn to recognize it and to control it. Know where you can get help from to handle it and don't be afraid to call for help when you most need it. Pressure can also be a distraction on scene.

9) Lack of Assertiveness. If it doesn't seem right, feel right, look right, smell right or whatever else, then grow a pair of big one between your legs and say something. How often do we read discussion forums where someone says it didn't seem right, yet they let it go? Every member needs to be able to exert some assertiveness to protect themselves. Look out for number 1. Remember, you may have seen something the OIC didn't and vice versa.

10) Stress. Stress can be a silent killer in the fire service. It can build and build and build to breaking point, then suddenly we're overwhelmed to the point we can no longer function or inflict harm on oursleves, friends or family. Just like pressure, know how to recognize the signs and know where to turn for help, and don't be afraid to. It's not a sign of weakness.

11) Lack of Awareness. Situational awareness is so important on the fire scene. Know what's going on around you at all times. I've watched members doing traffic control with their back to the traffic- WTF?! Know what type of structure you're dealing with, know how to use the right equipment for the right job- it's all about awareness. Straight from Gordon's article I linked at the start, consider this, "Lack of awareness occurs when there is a lack of alertness and vigilance in observing. This usually occurs with very experienced persons who fail to reason out possible consequences to what may normally be a good practice. One of the safety nets for lack of awareness is to ask more “what ifs” if there is conflicting information or things don’t quite seem right."

12) Norms. Be aware of the norms or the normals or the way things are routinely done. Be particulary vigilant for negative normals that detract from what we consider acceptable safety standards and practices. With changing technology and structures, we must no longer be sucked into the whole, "That's how we've always done it". Times are a changing, technology is changing, structures are changing. Be aware of this, learn about it and don't be distracted by the norms.

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Comment by Aussie_Wildfire on April 21, 2009 at 6:49am
It calls a spade a spade
well done luke
Comment by lutan1 on April 14, 2009 at 11:43pm
Richard, the original article is linked at the top, I don't know about the copyright for that. My adaption, no problems, I just ask for credit where credit is due. Thanks for the feeback everyone....
Comment by Richard DeSha on April 14, 2009 at 11:19pm
can i use this in the class im teaching about complacency? im sureit will open some eyes at my house.
Comment by Chad Furr on April 13, 2009 at 4:56pm
well witten. thanks for sharing
Comment by Ken O'Brian on April 13, 2009 at 8:55am
Thanks heaps Luke. Excellent article. Have already forwarded copies to a number of brigades in my area for their Brigade Management Teams to consider.
Comment by Tony P on April 13, 2009 at 7:14am
Those types of thing come up fairly often, but can never come up too often! I like your descriptive paragraphs Luke, written in our language.

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