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Accident
Statements
Only
about 10% of the participants in my training sessions report that
their organization requires formal accident statements from victims
or witnesses. Most simply use the 5 or 6 lines found on their
investigation reports to capture this information. For those that
have a separate statement page requirement virtually 100% of them
simply get the witness to write their statement and attach it
to the report. Seldom are the statement contents ever closely
examined, nor as class participants have stated, are they of much
value.
Not
every workplace accident needs to be examined or documented in
great detail. Given remote sites and the lack of readily
available investigators these “write ‘em out yourself and
send 'em in statements” will be around forever. However,
for those situations where the stakes are higher we need to do
a better job of collecting information. Here are a couple of ideas
that might improve the worth of a statement.
Any
statement should be committed to paper only
after a thorough interview. This is somewhat of a courtesy issue
as well. People want to talk about what happened to them or what
they saw. They will share far more information verbally than they
ever will by simply asking them to put it in writing. Can't get
to the site? Consider using the telephone to conduct this preliminary
interview.
Based
on the notes kept during the preliminary interview a formal statement
can now be completed by the investigator or the witness can be
asked to write out their statement. Any surprises uncovered during
the interview will now not be overlooked in the statement. Statements
taken on the fly in a question and answer format will usually
be less complete and accurate that one written after a properly
conducted interview. Important pieces of information will often
be overlooked. Have the chat first, and then complete the statement.
It
is usually more efficient for the investigator to do the writing
as if he was the witness using a first person perspective. For
example, rather than “the witness placed the ladder against the
scaffold.” Use “I placed the ladder against the scaffold.”
If
you are taking the statement you will need to review it word for
word with the witness and make corrections. Have the statement
signed and dated. Some organizations include the following as
part of the signature - “Everything in this statement
is true and accurate.” This can provide an incentive
during the witnesses' review to make those changes before accepting
full responsibility for the contents.
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