Tuesday, December 2, 2008
IAFC Launches Near-Miss Reporting System
Firefighters can now start reporting near-miss (or close call) events at www.firefighternearmiss.com, the Web-based National Fire Fighter Near-Miss Reporting System. The International Association of Fire Chiefs officially launched the program today at a press conference at the IAFC’s Fire-Rescue International conference in Denver.
Firefighternearmiss.com will help the fire service track the close calls
— incidents that do not lead to serious injury or death — and learn from
these human errors to increase its overall ability to protect firefighters
and the communities they serve. Firefighters who experience a near-miss
event fill out a quick, user-friendly report that is de-identified and posted
so firefighters in other departments can learn from the experiences. All
reports are voluntary, non-punitive and confidential.
Once a report is submitted, it is read and analyzed by at least two fire
service reviewers. These active duty fire service personnel ensure the confidentiality
of the report, code it for data purposes and post it for review by the fire
service. The analyzed data will be used to identify trends that can
assist in formulating strategies to reduce firefighter injuries and fatalities.
Depending on the urgency, information will be presented to the fire service
community via program reports, press releases and e-mail alerts.
“It used to be that when a firefighter experienced a near miss, he or she
might share it with fellow firefighters at the firehouse kitchen table over
dinner,” said Chief Bob DiPoli, 2004–2005 president of the IAFC. “The
Near-Miss Reporting System is like a virtual kitchen table that allows firefighters
to share those stories — and the lessons learned from them — with firefighters
from around the country.”
The National Fire Fighter Near-Miss Reporting System is funded by grants
from the Department of Homeland Security’s Assistance to Firefighters Grant
Program and Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company. Firefighternearmiss.com
is endorsed by the International Association of Fire Chiefs, the International
Association of Fire Fighters, and the Volunteer and Combination Officers
Section of the IAFC, and it is supported by firefighterclosecalls.com
in mutual dedication to firefighter safety and survival.
“The success of this innovative near-miss tool in the aviation industry in
preventing accidents and passenger deaths and injuries has been unprecedented,”
according to U.S. Fire Administrator R. David Paulison. “I look forward
to working with the IAFC and this nation’s fire departments to ensure that,
at the end of each day, Everyone Goes Home.”
"We are proud to partner with the IAFC on the Near-Miss Reporting System.
By reducing accidents and fatalities in the fire service, this vital program
will benefit every firefighter across the country,” said Darryl Siry, vice
president of Fireman's Fund Insurance Company and executive director of the
Fireman’s Fund Heritage program. “This is in line with our company’s
founding mission to support the fire service, and it complements our other
grant and volunteer programs.”
“Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company and the Department of Homeland Security
are critical partners in this important program,” said DiPoli. “Their support
will impact the lives of the more than one million firefighters in the United
States, and we thank them for their generous support of the fire service.”
Firefighter death and injury rates have continued to occur at a constant
rate, in spite of significant improvements in technology and personal protective
equipment, and death and injury reports indicate that a number of these deaths
are due in large part to human error and not to technological failure. The
National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) estimates that for every 100
incidents of injury, one million close call incidents go unreported.
Firefighternearmiss.com is based on a successful safety program used
in the aviation industry for the last 28 years. The airline industry
can prove statistically that tracking near-miss incidents has significantly
decreased the number of aviation injuries and deaths. Several other industries
and organizations, including the medical field, the petroleum/chemical industry
and the U.S. military, have addressed near-miss reporting and are receiving
similar results in changing the number of injuries and fatalities.
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