Madsen Peter, Dillon Robin L, Tinsley Catherine H
Marriott School of Management, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, USA.
McDonough School of Business, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, 20057, USA.
Risk Anal. 2016 May;36(5):1054-66. doi: 10.1111/risa.12503. Epub 2015 Oct 27.
In recent years, the U.S. commercial airline industry has achieved unprecedented levels of safety, with the statistical risk associated with U.S. commercial aviation falling to 0.003 fatalities per 100 million passengers. But decades of research on organizational learning show that success often breeds complacency and failure inspires improvement. With accidents as rare events, can the airline industry continue safety advancements? This question is complicated by the complex system in which the industry operates where chance combinations of multiple factors contribute to what are largely probabilistic (rather than deterministic) outcomes. Thus, some apparent successes are realized because of good fortune rather than good processes, and this research intends to bring attention to these events, the near-misses. The processes that create these near-misses could pose a threat if multiple contributing factors combine in adverse ways without the intervention of good fortune. Yet, near-misses (if recognized as such) can, theoretically, offer a mechanism for continuing safety improvements, above and beyond learning gleaned from observable failure. We test whether or not this learning is apparent in the airline industry. Using data from 1990 to 2007, fixed effects Poisson regressions show that airlines learn from accidents (their own and others), and from one category of near-misses-those where the possible dangers are salient. Unfortunately, airlines do not improve following near-miss incidents when the focal event has no clear warnings of significant danger. Therefore, while airlines need to and can learn from certain near-misses, we conclude with recommendations for improving airline learning from all near-misses.
近年来,美国商业航空业实现了前所未有的安全水平,美国商业航空的统计风险降至每1亿乘客中有0.003人死亡。但数十年来对组织学习的研究表明,成功往往滋生自满,而失败则激发改进。由于事故是罕见事件,航空业能否继续推进安全工作?该行业运作的复杂系统使这个问题变得复杂,在这个系统中,多种因素的偶然组合导致了很大程度上具有概率性(而非确定性)的结果。因此,一些明显的成功是由于运气而非良好的流程实现的,本研究旨在关注这些事件,即险些发生的事故。如果多种促成因素以不利方式组合且没有运气的干预,那么导致这些险些发生事故的流程可能会构成威胁。然而,理论上,险些发生的事故(如果被识别出来)可以提供一种机制,用于持续改进安全,这超出了从可观察到的失败中获得的经验教训。我们测试这种学习在航空业是否明显。使用1990年至2007年的数据,固定效应泊松回归表明,航空公司会从事故(自身和其他公司的事故)以及一类险些发生的事故——那些可能危险很突出的事故中学习。不幸的是,当焦点事件没有明显的重大危险警告时,航空公司在险些发生事故后不会改进。因此,虽然航空公司需要并能够从某些险些发生的事故中学习,但我们最后提出了改进航空公司从所有险些发生事故中学习的建议。