Health & Safety Management:
Optimising outcomes from your health, safety and rehabilitation service providers
Sue Read - Psychologist
Senior Prevention & Injury Management Consultant Comcare
Overview
An integrated organisational approach to health and safety
Principles for optimising outcomes from your health, safety and rehabilitation service providers
Case study - exploring organisational approaches to identified workplace issues
Senior management
leadership and commitment
OHS Risk Management
Model Principles
Active involvement of each individual
in the workplace
Hazardidentification
risk assessment and risk control
Effective communication
through consultation
Provision of appropriate information,
education and training
OHS management information
systems
OHS Risk Management Model
Com
mun
icat
e an
d co
nsul
t
Monitor and evaluate the controls
Rev
iew
the
Pro
gram
Identify the Hazard
Assess the Risks
Control the Risks
Risk Management
A comprehensive approach to the risk management process
Prevention - Integrated management systems
• People management
• Risk management
• Business performance
• Customer service
The Injury PreventionThe Injury Prevention & Management Continuum & Management Continuum
PreventionPrevention Secondary Secondary PreventionPrevention
InjuryInjury RehabilitationRehabilitation RecoveryRecovery
Positive Positive Workplace Workplace
CultureCultureEarly InterventionEarly Intervention
Maintain connection with Maintain connection with the workplacethe workplace
Hazard Id
Risk
Assessment
Risk Control
Monitor &
Review
Respond to warning signs
Injury
notification
Medical
attention
Early contact
(Claim)
Arrange Assessment
Provide a RTW Plan
Monitor until sustained
PreventionPrevention
Early InterventionEarly Intervention
RehabilitationRehabilitation
ORGANISATIONALORGANISATIONAL
INDIVIDUALINDIVIDUAL
Reactive approachesReactive approaches to deal with injury or external service
providers will not:
• Address systemic OHS issues
• Lead to permanent improvements
Organisational problems need Organisational problems need organisational solutionsorganisational solutions
A strategic approachstrategic approach will:
• Allow identification of systemic OHS issues
• Allow these issues to be prioritised and
addressed
• Lead to long term improvements that survive
changing personnel
Planning to engage health, safety and rehabilitation service providers
• Engaging providers to address organisational
issues needs to be strategic, complimentarystrategic, complimentary and
alignedaligned with the organisation’s health and safety goals rather than ‘ad hoc’
• Interventions may be aimed at identifying and identifying and
addressing risk of injuryaddressing risk of injury, supporting and supporting and
assisting employees at riskassisting employees at risk, and/or implementing
safe and effective return to worksafe and effective return to work of injured employees
• The closer the intervention to the risk the more far reaching will be the impact and outcomes
Case Study“An employee lodged a claim recently alleging repeated claim recently alleging repeated bullying and harassmentbullying and harassment, and that their manager had engaged in an unfair and inappropriate performance management process. This employee has had higher than the average absent days over the last four months”
“you discover that the average number of days offaverage number of days off for all staff in this team is nearly twice the average of the rest of the organisation.”
“Quarterly reports from the Harassment Contact Officers Harassment Contact Officers (HCO’s)(HCO’s) network indicate an increase over the last year in the number of requests for informal guidance and support ”
“types of behaviours behaviours being exhibited by select individuals, and also about one or two senior managersabout one or two senior managers.”
““no one really cares about what we do here anyway”no one really cares about what we do here anyway”
Absenteeism ratesAbsenteeism rates across the organisation higher than they were last year
Employee Opinion Survey results – 32% of staff32% of staff ‘experienced bullying or harassing behaviours’bullying or harassing behaviours’ in the last 12 months, high percentage of staff ‘did not feel supported by their line manager’
“ “Employee turnoverEmployee turnover has been higher than usual, hard to attract and retain good staff to fill a number of recent vacancies”
Managers finding it hard to get staff to engage with their work, finding staff ‘unmotivated
Recruitment costsRecruitment costs have risen by 35% in the last year
Increase in EAP usage – 15% increase in work related counselling
Exit interviewsExit interviews – 2 senior employees stated in their exit interviews that they believed there was a blaming cultureblaming culture and a culture of only communicating when things had gone wrong. No communication of success
Rehabilitation – assist return to work of injured employees
(Tertiary interventions)
• Provide safe and effective rehabilitation and return to work for individuals once an injury has occurred and preferably before a workers’ compensation claim has been lodged
• Focus on the provision of assistance and services after an injury has occurred
• Ensure that when an injury does occur, employees have a timely return to work and resume prior functioning
Examples of tertiary level interventions are:
• Policy and procedures to enable safe and durable return to work
• Assessment of rehabilitation needs
• Planning rehabilitation programs with general practitioners
• Early access to treatment
• Management provision of suitable duties
• Case conferencing
Early intervention – support employees at risk
(Secondary interventions)
• Provide a safety netsafety net of services and interventions which have a role in preventing injury and providing assistance to aid recovery
• Monitor the health and wellbeing of employees and identify warning signswarning signs of potential injury
• Intervene earlyIntervene early to provide supportprovide support for employees who are experiencing early signs or symptoms before they develop into an injury or illness
Examples of secondary interventions are:
• Systematic monitoring of indicators such as absenteeism, turnover, grievances
• Employee assistance program counselling
• Manager assistance programs
• Training (recognition of warning signs)
• Critical incident debriefing
• Conflict resolution strategies
• Early intervention policies and strategies
• Management support and assistance for employees
Prevention – manage the risk of injury/illness
(Primary interventions)
• Focus on the risk at the source to prevent it occurring
• Aim to create a safe and healthy workplace and systematically address workplace hazards that may lead to injury
• Systems and strategies that an employer has in place prior to an employee starting work
Examples of primary interventions are:
• leadership development programs
• developing effective communication through consultation
• management and staff information education and training in Occupational Health and Safety roles and responsibilities
• hazard identification, risk assessment and control
• organisational health evaluation and plan
• OHS management systems audit
Key questions prior to engaging an external service provider
In the context of the risk management process:
Can you describe and define the problem?
How could this issue be addressed?
What internal resources are available?
Has the problem been addressed elsewhere in the organisation or by other agencies?
What would the intervention/service be aiming to achieve?
How does this intervention align with your agency’s overall health and safety strategy?
How will outcomes be measured including value for money?
How will the outcomes of this intervention/service be generalised and communicated in your agency?
What reporting will be required?
Getting the most out of external service providers
• Analyse the issue that needs addressing and develop a business case for intervention
• Outline how the intervention or service provision fits in with the overall health and safety strategies of the organisation
• Seek assistance to establish a clear service level agreement or contractual arrangement
• Ensure the service provider has the appropriate qualifications and skills to deliver effectively
Gaining the most out of external service providers
• Assess whether the service achieves value for moneyvalue for money
• Promote the use of providers in an efficient, effective efficient, effective and ethical mannerand ethical manner
• Make decisions in an accountable and transparent wayaccountable and transparent way
• Ensure that your service level agreementservice level agreement:
• Clearly sets out expectationsexpectations
• Includes service level requirements
• Outlines a measure of intended outcomesintended outcomes
• Outlines expected reporting requirementsreporting requirements from the provider back to the organisation
Getting the most out of external service providers
What do you want them to do?
How well do you want them to do it?
How will you know if your outcomes are
achieved?
What will it cost (does it achieve value for
money)?
What reporting will be provided back to the
organisation that can be used for further learning?
Monitor and Review
Monitor and review the implementation (process) and effectiveness (outcome) of interventions:
• Measure and reportMeasure and report against agreed targets and performance indicators, and review against strategy goals
• Aim for continuous improvementcontinuous improvement, rather than expecting a dramatic and uniformly positive impact
• Improve interventions as indicated by the review and evaluation
Engaging service providers – summary
When engaging external service providers rather than being ‘reactionary’ ensure their use is:
• StrategicStrategic – aligned with your organisation’s health and safety goals
• Meets the identified needsidentified needs of the organisation
• Integrates with other risk and people management strategies
• Mix of organisational and individual level Mix of organisational and individual level
interventionsinterventions
References – Available at www.comcare.gov.au
• Working Well: an organisational approach to preventing psychological injury (Publication 47)
• Working Well: steps to prevent and manage psychological injury (Publication 56)
• Working Well: strategies to prevent psychological injury at work (Publication 57)
• Targets for achieving better workplace Health, Safety and Rehabilitation. Australian government premium paying employers (Publication 09)
• Leadership Commitment: Early Rehabilitation Assistance to Employees (Publication 31)
References – Available at www.comcare.gov.au
• Positive performance indicators: Measuring Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Performance (Publication 10)
• Rehabilitation: Managing Return to Work, a Better Practice Guide for Senior Managers and Supervisors (Publication 16)
• Identifying Hazards in the Workplace (OHS10)
• Safe and Sound: Safety Leadership in Government Workplaces (Publication 35)
• Employee Opinion Surveys (Publication 53)
• Bullying in the Workplace: A guide to prevention for managers and supervisors (OHS65)
An organisational approach to prevention and management of injury
• Strong management commitmentmanagement commitment
• Employee involvement Employee involvement
• Clear description of the problem and business case
setting
• Goals for improvementGoals for improvement
• Integrated management systemsIntegrated management systems approach
• Targeted interventionsTargeted interventions which may be aimed at
prevention, early intervention and rehabilitation
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