An accident, also known as an unintentional injury, is an undesirable, incidental, and unplanned event that could have been prevented had circumstances leading up to the accident been recognized, and acted upon, prior to its occurrence. Most scientists who study unintentional injury avoid using the term "accident" and focus on factors that increase risk of severe injury and that reduce injury incidence and severity.
Video Accident
Types
Physical and non-physical
Physical examples of accidents include unintended motor vehicle collisions or falls, being injured by touching something sharp, hot, moving objects, contacting electricity or ingesting poison. Non-physical examples are unintentionally revealing a secret or otherwise saying something incorrectly, accidental deletion of data, forgetting an appointment etc.
By activity
- Accidents during the execution of work or arising out of it are called work accidents. According to the International Labour Organization (ILO), more than 337 million accidents happen on the job each year, resulting, together with occupational diseases, in more than 2.3 million deaths annually.
- In contrast, leisure-related accidents are mainly sports injuries.
By vehicle
- Aviation
- Bicycles
- Sailing ships
- Traffic collisions
- Train wrecks
- Trams
Maps Accident
Common causes
Poisons, vehicle collisions and falls are the most common causes of fatal injuries. According to a 2005 survey of injuries sustained at home, which used data from the National Vital Statistics System of the United States National Center for Health Statistics, falls, poisoning, and fire/burn injuries are the most common causes of death.
The United States also collects statistically valid injury data (sampled from 100 hospitals) through the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System administered by the Consumer Product Safety Commission. This program was revised in 2000 to include all injuries rather than just injuries involving products. Data on emergency room visits is also collected through the National Health Interview Survey. In The U.S. the Bureau of Labor Statistics has available on their website extensive statistics on workplace accidents.
Accident models
Many models to characterize and analyze accidents have been proposed, which can by classified by type. Notable types and models include:
- Sequential models
- Domino Theory
- Loss Causation Model
- Complex linear models
- Energy Damage Model
- Time sequence models
- Generalized Time Sequence Model
- Accident Evolution and Barrier Function
- Epidemiological models
- Gordon 1949
- Onward Mappings Model based on Resident Pathogens Metaphor
- Process model
- Benner 1975
- Systemic models
- Rasmussen
- Reason Model of System Safety (embedding the Swiss cheese model)
- Healthcare error proliferation model
- Human reliability
- Woods, 1994
- Non-linear models
- System accident
- Systems-Theoretic Accident Model and Process (STAMP)
- Functional Resonance Accident Model (FRAM)
- Assertions that all existing models are insufficient
Ishikawa diagrams are sometimes used to illustrate root-cause analysis and five whys discussions.
See also
General
- Accident analysis
- Root cause analysis
- Accident-proneness
- Idiot proof
- Injury
- Injury prevention
- List of accidents and disasters by death toll
- Safety
- Safety engineering
- Fail-safe
- Poka-yoke
- Risk management
Transportation
- Air safety
- Aviation accidents and incidents
- Bicycle safety
- Car
- Automobile safety
- Traffic collision
- List of rail accidents
- Tram accident
- Sailing ship accidents
Other specific topics
- Aisles: Safety and regulatory considerations
- Explosives safety
- Nuclear and radiation accidents
- Occupational safety and health
- Safety data sheet
- Personal protective equipment
- Criticality accident
- Sports injury
References
External links
Source of the article : Wikipedia