Module-1 Midyear
Module-1 Midyear
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.1
Concept of Safety
What is safety?
Consider (the weaknesses in the notion of perfection)
• Zero accidents? • the elimination of aircraft accidents and/or serious
incidents remains the ultimate goal.
• Freedom from danger or risks? • the aviation system cannot be completely free of
• Error avoidance? hazards and associated risks.
• Regulatory compliance? • human activities or human-built systems cannot
be guaranteed to be absolutely free from
• …? operational errors and their consequences.
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.2
Concept of Safety
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.3
Concept of Safety
Traditional approach in preventing Identified:
accidents: • What?
• Focused on outcomes (direct cause/s) • Who?
• Unsafe acts by operational personnel • When?
• Attached blame/punish line personnel But does not always disclose
for failures to “perform safely“
the:
• Addressed identified safety concern
exclusively • Why?
• How?
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.4
Concept of Safety
Within the context of aviation, safety is “the state in which
the possibility of harm to persons or of property damage is
reduced to, and maintained at or below, an acceptable level
through a continuing process of hazard identification and
safety risk management.”
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.5
Why Safety Management?
• The purpose of safety management is to
proactively mitigate safety risks before they
result in aviation accidents and incidents.
• Safety management enables States to
manage their safety activities in a more
disciplined, integrative and focused manner.
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.6
The Evolution of Safety
TECHNICAL ERA
Future
HUMAN FACTORS ERA
ORGANIZATIONAL ERA
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.8
The Evolution of Safety
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.9
The Evolution of Safety
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.10
The Evolution of Safety
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.11
The Concept of Accident Causation
The Swiss cheese model Some holes due to
active failures
Hazard: A condition or
an object with the
potential to cause or
contribute to an
aircraft incident or
accident.
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.12
The Concept of Accident Causation
The Swiss cheese model Some holes due to
active failures
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.18
The Concept of Accident Causation
The Swiss cheese model Some holes due to
active failures
Active Failures: actions or inactions, including errors and rule-breaking that
have an immediate adverse effect. They are viewed with the benefit of hindsight,
as unsafe acts. Active failures are associated with front-line personnel (pilots, air
traffic controllers, aircraft maintenance, engineers, etc.) and may result to
harmful outcome.
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.14
The Organizational Accident
Organizational processes
❖ Policy-making
❖ Planning
❖ Communication
❖ Allocation of resources
❖ Supervision
Activities over which any organization has a reasonable degree of direct control
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.15
The Organizational Accident
Organizational processes
Latent conditions
❖Inadequate hazard
identification
and Safety risk management
❖Normalization of deviance
Conditions present in the system before the accident, made evident by triggering factors.
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.16
The Organizational Accident
Organizational processes
Latent conditions
❖ Technology
❖ Training
❖ Regulations Defenses
Resources to protect against the risks that organizations involved in production activities
generate and must control
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.17
The Organizational Accident
Organizational processes
Workplace
conditions ❖Workforce stability Latent conditions
❖Qualifications and experience
❖Morale
Defenses
❖Management Credibility
❖Ergonomics
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.18
The Organizational Accident
Organizational processes
Workplace
Latent conditions
conditions
❖Errors
❖Violations
Active failures Defenses
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.19
The Organizational Accident
Organizational processes
Workplace
Latent conditions
conditions
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.20
The SHEL(L) Model
People, Context and Safety Maintenance
Managers
Safety
Manager
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.21
The SHEL(L) Model
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.22
The SHEL(L) Model
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.23
The SHEL(L) Model
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.24
The SHEL(L) Model
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.25
The SHEL(L) Model
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.26
Understanding operational errors
A mismatch between
the LIVEWARE and the • Human error is considered a contributory
other four components factor in most aviation occurrences.
contributes to human • Even competent personnel commit
error – thus, these errors.
interactions must be
assessed and • Errors must be accepted as a normal
considered in all component of any system where humans
sectors of the aviation and technology interact
system.
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.27
Errors and Violations
Effective SMS implementation by the product or service provider
is dependent upon clear, mutual understanding of errors and
violations and the differentiation between the two.
The difference between errors and violation lies in intent.
A violation is a deliberate
act or omission to deviate
An error is unintentional from established
procedures, protocols,
norms or practices
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.28
Errors and Violations
Error is an action or
An important goal is to set and maintain
inaction by an
defenses to reduce likelihood of errors
operational
personnel that
and reduce consequences of errors
leads to deviations when they do occur. Errors must be
from organizational identified, reported and analyzed so
or the operational that appropriate remedial action can be
person’s intentions taken
or expectations.
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.29
Errors and Violations
• Two categories:
Error is an action or
inaction by an ➢ Slips/lapses
operational ➢ Mistakes
personnel that • Three strategies for control of human error:
leads to deviations
from organizational ➢ Error reduction strategies
or the operational ➢ Capturing strategies
person’s intentions ➢ Error tolerance strategies
or expectations.
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.30
Errors and Violations
A violation is a • While intentional, violations are NOT always
deliberate act of malicious and may be done in the belief that
willful misconduct the violation facilitates mission achievement
or omission without creating adverse consequences
resulting to (judgment error)
deviation from • Three categories:
established
procedures, ➢ situational
protocols, norms or ➢ routine
practices ➢ Organizationally induced
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.31
Knowledge Check
• Q: Explain the components of the SHEL(L) Model.
• A: ?
• Software (S): procedures, training, support, etc.;
• Hardware (H): machines and equipment
• Environment (E): the working environment in
which the rest of the L-H-S systems function;
and
• Liveware (L): humans in the workplace
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.33
The Management Dilemma
Management levels
Resources Resources
Management levels
Resources Resources
Protection Production
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.35
The Management Dilemma
Resources
Resources
Protection Production
Protection Production
Bankruptcy Catastrophe
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.36
The Management Dilemma
The allocation of excessive resources to
protection or risk controls may result in the
product or service becoming unprofitable
Protection
Safety space is a
It is essential metaphor
that the f or a
management
zone where of an
an organization balances
desired
organization acknowledge the while
production/profitability
need torequired
maintaining maintain an prot ection
safety
appropriate safetyrisk
through safety space.
controls
Production
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.37
An Imperfect System
Scott A. Snook’s
Theory of
Practical Drift
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.38
Practical Drift
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.39
Practical Drift
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.40
Knowledge Check
• Q: The baseline performance expected was that the HUMS system would
always be operational and serviceable for all flights. What two reasons
caused the operational performance to divert from the baseline and become
an example of Practical Drift?
• A:
a. Procedures that cannot be executed as planned under certain operational
conditions.
b. Introduction of changes to the system
c. Regulations that are not applicable
d. Technology that does not always operate as predicted
?
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.43
Summary
The following topics were covered in this module:
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.44
THANK YOU
SMS v12.1 January 2022 Civil Aviation Training Center - Manila PPT 1.45