Accident Investigation Series (Part 1): What “Caused” This Mishap?

Supervisors wear many hats, including being an impartial accident investigator and hearing, “Joey backed the forklift off the loading dock and is in the hospital…can you do the injury investigation report?” 

Every incident injury report should include the facts of who, where and when. Now without pointing fingers and blame, the appointed investigator is stuck figuring out WHY Joey backed a forklift off the loading dock so you can prevent this from happening again.

There are many theories to determining a mishap’s root cause by using findings and causal factors. One method that helps the supervisor determine the “why,” is the Heinrich Domino Model.

Figure Out the Findings

Start with determining the findings. Findings are factual statements of the employee’s training, work environment, the management, the procedures and the equipment/machinery involved in the mishap. Once these factual statements are confirmed, the findings will need to include the employee’s chronological actions leading to the accident. For a visual, line the findings chronologically like standing dominos on their ends.

The causal factor will be the domino (finding) that will interrupt the knockdown effect and prevent the mishap if removed from the standing line. 

Now Find the Root Factor

Now we need to determine WHY the employee failed to do the mandatory brake inspection – the causal factor for the mishap – which would have exposed the leaking brake hazard. A root cause analysis is a systematic technique that focuses on finding the real cause of a problem that will help you develop a recommendation to prevent a similar mishap, rather than just dealing with its symptoms. For example, if the operator failed to identify a forklift hazard, was it due to time allotted to do an inspection, lack of accountability or supervision, discipline, or was there a distraction or complacency? 

Once you identify the causal and root factors, make a recommendation based on what you find. In this scenario, what can be recommended to prevent a forklift operator from failing to do a daily forklift inspection?

I hope you found this first installment of our Accident Investigation series helpful. Look for Part 2 where I will cover interviewing witnesses after an accident has occurred.

Jacki Mortenson
Jacki Mortenson
Jacki joined ICW Group in 2015 and provides risk management services throughout Southern California. She assists clients across a spectrum of industries, including construction, transportation, hospitality, manufacturing, agriculture and residential healthcare. Jacki earned the majority of her risk and safety applications while serving in the USAF as an aircrew member specializing in flight mishap investigations.

Related Articles

What You Need To Know About Fall Protection

Fall protection (general requirements) continues to be the #1 cited OSHA violation, with fall protection (training) coming in at #7. Basically, falls are a big deal at a work...

Strategies to Reduce Stress and Promote Workplace Safety

In today’s fast-paced work environment, the relationship between a troubled employee and workplace safety is more intertwined than ever. As organizations continue to push for greater efficiency and productivity,...

OSHA’s Top Ten Safety Violations for 2024

As OSHA unveils the 2024 list of its 10 most frequently cited safety violations, there are once again no surprises at the top. For the 14th consecutive year, Fall Protection...