Most organisations take a random approach when it comes to commitment around projects intended to improve work design, according to a human-centred design expert.
Most organisations take a random approach when it comes to commitment around projects intended to improve work design, according to a human-centred design expert.
While such activities are often strongly anchored in physical ergonomics, they are rarely generated by a focus on the aspects of cognitive or organisational ergonomics – although these areas may overlap, said Sara Pazell, Managing Director of consulting firm Viva Health at Work.
Examples of this overlap include a participatory ergonomics project for manual task risk management, review of new capital equipment for procurement, or environmental work design for a fit-out.
On rare occasion, Pazell said the work design may focus on something related to cognitive ergonomics and systems changes like training and competency methods in the business.
“These projects tend to always have some measure of success in areas of improved health opportunities, productivity and efficiency, or risk reduction, so this is good news,” said Pazell, who was speaking ahead of a webinar which will be held on Thursday 8 August 2019.
“However, my research, informed by case study, program review, and questionnaire and interview with experienced practitioners and managers, indicated that if projects were part of an ongoing program within a resilient or enterprising organisation, the extent of project success was six times greater, on average.”
Pazell observed that there are challenges for organisations to adopt these practices, because it involves a change in thinking and pervasive leadership support starting at the Board and executive or C-suite level.
“Without this, the likelihood of the development and management of a sustainable, comprehensive, and well-managed program is low,” said Pazell.
“When projects are initiated and supported by one critical team leader or manager, the impetus for change and growth often leaves when they do.
There are a number of common gaps and challenges (and, thus, opportunities) for organisations:
However, Pazell said there are also a number of steps organisations can take to shape their competitive profile and advance good work design in their business. These include:
For health and safety professionals, Pazell also said there are emerging trends in their theory and practice: resilience engineering, safety differently, safety II, and human organisation performance precepts.
These have emerged owing to the infusion of evidence provided by human-centred design, human factors, and ergonomics, according to Pazell: “to look at a system and seek factors of resilience and reinforce and augment features that regulate and improve system performance, not just gamble on the efforts that might mitigate risk,” she said.
Understanding the varieties of human work (Shorrock, 2016) is also an important approach to understanding system performance.
In these models, humans are viewed as part or innovators of a solution, rather than a risk by their very existence (unpredictability being a hallmark).
Holistic viewpoints are also emerging with the advent of Total Worker Health too, added Pazell, who said there are accrediting standards such as the International Well Building Institute for health in the built environment, an ergonomics credit associated with the Green Building Council for fit-outs, and Good Design Awards Australia (and other safety association awards) that recognise this human-centred approach.
“Of course, technology trends cannot be overlooked because they may afford efficiencies, communication breakthroughs, or the benefit of providing immersive environments to enhance learning, design, health, safety, and wellbeing,” she said.
“In my own work, I try and help extend the thinking of health and safety managers to give equal importance to the “health” element of work design as much as safety. I call this the “flipped” conceptual model for OHS, based on the model developed by SIA (AIHS).”
A conceptual approach to OHS “flipped”: Toward good work design – a salutogenic approach; adapted from the conceptual model for OHS
There are a number of implications in the above for OHS leaders, according to Pazell, who said that OHS leaders need to allow themselves to become uncomfortable and be prepared to embrace new thinking, tools and methods.
“Invite design specialists into the fold and integrate efforts across multiple business units,” she said.
“Advance an agenda and empower a design champion internally with the objective to seek opportunities for transformation in the business – technological, communication, training/education, team development, and work systems (including tasks, equipment, tools, environments, and processes).”
The implications for the OHS leader include becoming a strategist beyond technical speciality practice in order to influence the leadership and create collaborative partnerships inter- and intra-organisationally, and cross-industry.
As such, she said OHS leaders should also seek technical specialists (like occupational hygiene, ergonomics, structural design, legal, or finance) and develop a fold of project-based consultants that can offer fluid, agile, evidence-based, and quality solutions to the business.
Pazell will be presenting a webinar on good work design and strategies for embedding human-centred design into your organisation on Thursday 8 August 2019 from 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm (AEST). For more information or to register please visit the AIHS website
Article originally published by the Australian Institute of Health and Safety.