[SystemSafety] Children as a causal factor in major accidents
John Downer
johndowner2 at gmail.com
Wed Oct 1 16:43:17 CEST 2014
Sort of an addendum to the first:
Child is particularly vulnerable because diminished reasoning. (Child-proof pill bottles. etc.)
Also potentially dangerous for the same reason. (In case a pop-culture reference would be useful then "War Games", the movie, seems like a good fit.)
John
-----------
Dr. John Downer
Lecturer in Risk and Regulation
SPAIS
University of Bristol
> On Oct 1, 2014, at 3:06 PM, DREW Rae <d.rae at griffith.edu.au> wrote:
>
> Reporting back to the list because a lot of the ideas were sent directly to me. Thank you to Peter, John, Patrick, Philip, Mike, Brian, and Alan.
>
> The replies covered a what seems to be an interesting space:
> Child is particularly vulnerable because of their size and body mass. This is important in analysing the effects of exposure, but also with drug safety, medical devices, poisons, and aggressive animals.
> Child is incompatible with personal safety protection provided for adults (seat belts on cars, lap belts on planes, life jackets, air bags). Using the adult safety equipment may be more dangerous than no equipment, with the added concern of providing something appropriate and accessible for children.
> Child equipment incompatible with the system (child leashes stuck in elevator doors, strollers/prams stuck on railway crossings)
> Child security incompatible with safety, or system security incompatible with child safety (mostly involving children locking themselves into spaces or locking adults out of spaces)
> Child incompatible with system safety protection (unable to read warnings, unable to activate alarms, unable to recognise "obvious" danger because it doesn't look dangerous)
> Child as a special case of misuse, because unaware of the consequences of their actions (misuse of alarms, fiddling with controls, disabling autopilot, releasing handbrake)
> Child unable to report danger to themselves or others (secondary drowning, leaving system in an unsafe state)
>
> Fortunately from a safety point of view, only one major accident (Aeroflot 583) was mentioned. I suspect I might find something more once I look at these specific issues.
>
> Have I/we missed anything important? Is anyone interested in collaborating to take this a bit further? I think there'd be something interesting to say by looking at this through a few of the major safety models. All of those issues could be characterised as child-induced control loop failures. Children have different mental models, different capacity for control, different feedback etc. They could also be a scope issue for safety cases. "Have you thought about children" could undercut various types of evidence and argument. Even in a simple barrier model children could distort the effectiveness and side-effects of barriers.
>
> Regards,
> Drew
>
> My safety podcast: disastercast.co.uk
> My mobile (until October 2nd): +44 7783 446 814
> My mobile (from October 6th): 0450 161 361
>
>> On Wed, Oct 1, 2014 at 9:43 AM, DREW Rae <d.rae at griffith.edu.au> wrote:
>> Hi folks,
>> I've had an interesting request for a DisasterCast episode focussing on children and major accidents.
>>
>> 1) Can anyone suggest a major accident where the presence or behavior of children have been a causal factor? I'm looking specifically for where they increased or determined the likelihood of the accident, not just accidents with large numbers of children.
>>
>> 2) Can anyone suggest (in public-domain terms) ways children have had to be treated as a special case in safety analysis?
>> Off the top of my head I can think of children as a special group in population dose-response modelling for chemical releases, and the debate about child restraints in aircraft.
>>
>> [Didn't want to send a separate email to the whole list, but a public thank you to John and Nancy for help with my last request re Columbia].
>>
>> Drew
>>
>> My safety podcast: disastercast.co.uk
>> My mobile (until October 2nd): +44 7783 446 814
>> My mobile (from October 6th): 0450 161 361
>
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