Transform your safety and health program with leading indicators
What if there was a way to prevent workplace injuries and illnesses and reduce the costs associated with them? How about improving productivity, overall organizational performance, safety, and health performance, all while raising worker participation? Effectively using leading indicators can do just that!
Examples of leading indicators
Any measure or piece of data that allows you to impact the future while working in the present can be a leading indicator. You can use observations, inspections, and surveys as leading indicators. Examples may include:
- Near miss tracking,
- Safety training attendance,
- Maintenance frequency,
- Risk assessments,
- Inspections,
- Leadership safety engagement,
- Corrective actions completed, and
- Employee safety perception surveys.
Leading indicators
According to OSHA, leading indicators are proactive, preventive, and predictive measures that can shed light on the effective performance of safety and health-related activities and reveal potential problems in a safety and health program.
Establishing a framework for effective and realistic leading indicators starts with making sure they are Specific, Measurable, Accountable, Reasonable, and Timely:
- Specific: Does your leading indicator provide specifics for the action that you will take to minimize risk from a hazard or improve a program area?
- Measurable: Is your leading indicator presented as a number, rate, or percentage that allows you to track and evaluate clear trends over time?
- Accountable: Does your leading indicator track an item that is relevant to your goal?
- Reasonable: Can you reasonably achieve the goal that you set for your leading indicator?
- Timely: Are you regularly tracking your leading indicator to spot meaningful trends from your data within your desired timeframe?
Plan of action
Whether you have a robust safety and health program or one in its infancy, leading indicators are a valuable tool to make measurable and long-lasting improvements to an organization. Follow these seven steps to get started:
- Identify your top problem areas. Review injury logs and hazard assessments. Evaluate and prioritize the hazard(s) with the greatest risk, including the severity of potential exposure and the likelihood that an incident could occur.
- Talk with your workers about what areas you could improve and whether it’s an area you should prioritize.
- Consider what actions you could take to address your priority areas, including talking to anyone with knowledge of the issue who can provide suggestions.
- Set a goal, including how long it might take to achieve it, and choose a leading indicator that can help you achieve that goal over time.
- Collect data for the timeframe you have established in step #4.
- Review the results periodically using visual graphics and charts where appropriate to determine the relationship between your leading indicator and your goal. If the action is not helping you to achieve your goal, try something else.
- Get started today with just one or two indicators to make a positive impact.
Using leading indicators
There are various approaches to developing and implementing leading indicators, as they aren’t “one size fits all.” Organizations with a well-established safety and health program may use them to monitor how close they are to achieving higher performance goals. Those with newer programs may use leading indicators to focus on starting a program. It’s recommended that you use the best approach that works for your organization.
Key to remember: Effectively using leading indicators can prevent workplace injuries and illnesses, reduce associated costs, improve productivity and overall organizational performance, enhance safety and health performance, and raise worker participation.