Critical Behavior Analysis Tool Bena
Critical Behavior Analysis Tool Bena
After forming your design team for the Behavior-Based Safety implementation process,
use the Critical Behavior Analysis Tool to help you identify why the at-risk behaviors occur.
The goal of the process is to encourage safe behaviors that are self-reinforcing. By encouraging
self-reinforcing safe behaviors, you will greatly reduce the potential for accidents. Don’t expect
changes in your company’s safety culture to happen overnight or by the end of the week. You
should, however, expect some positive changes reasonably soon when you use this tool.
Behavior Input
Gives information regarding the behaviors.
Reminds us of what the rules and procedures require.
Raises awareness of accident and injury prevention.
Strengthens the safety culture of the company.
A stimulus plus a reward drives our behaviors. The stimulus occurs before the behavior,
and the reward occurs after the behavior.
Stimulus
Stimulus Behavior
Behavior Reward
Stimulus Reward
Directs Motivates
Behavior Behavior
+NC: Rewards with Positive (+), Now and Certain qualities encourage the
recurrence of the behavior.
This is the desired reward quality to encourage and maintain safe behaviors.
Example: Immediate positive feedback to an employee who is performing a desired
behavior.
This same reward quality can also encourage the recurrence of an at-risk behavior.
Example: Not following safety procedures in order to finish a task much quicker. If
the +NC reward qualities are experienced as a result of the at-risk behavior, then it is
encouraged to recur.
– NC: Rewards with Negative (-), Now and Certain qualities discourage behaviors.
This reward quality can help eliminate at-risk behaviors.
Example: Knowing that you may suffer an injury or be immediately reprimanded if
you perform an unsafe act.
Also, care should be given not to provide rewards with -NC qualities to any desired
behavior because, as mentioned above, these rewards decrease the behavior!
Note that the absence of a negative reward also encourages behavior to recur, such as
when we “Got by with it”
or, “Didn’t get caught this time.”