Data Collection
This article concerns the structured data collection phase utilised during an incident investigation following the on-scene inspection.
The data collection phase of an investigation is where Investigators gather all relevant facts to fully understand the lead-up to the incident, the incident itself, and post- incident recovery. It is critical that all three phases of the incident sequence are understood in order to identify all of the contributing factors.
A Structured Approach
Without a structured approach to data collection, Investigators can easily focus on one area of concern without considering other possible factors that may have contributed. Part of the Incident Cause Analysis Method (ICAM) process is having a structured approach to data collection where all areas are considered.
To aid Investigators and provide a disciplined, structured approach to data collection, the ICAM process advocates collecting data under five key areas, referred to as PEEPO, which refers to:
People - who can provide more information about the incident, the process, the equipment, the lead-up to the incident, etc. List roles / people who will be spoken to or interviewed.
Environment - what environmental impact was present at the time (both external, such as weather) as well as internal (stress, time pressures, etc.)
Equipment - what equipment, tools, and plant were involved / of interest in relation to the incident?
Procedures – what relevant procedures, documentation/paperwork are relevant to understand the operator / plant / process, etc.
Organisation - policies and processes in relation to underlying organisational issues.
The goal of PEEPO Mark #1 is to coordinate data collection very quickly rather than stand around at the incident scene discussing what the investigation team is “going to” collect and then find two hours later that no actual data or evidence has been collected.
It is important to note that the PEEPO process has two distinct uses, which are used at different stages of the investigation process (referred to by ICAM Australia as PEEPO Mark #1 and PEEPO Mark #2). This particular issue has been found to be misunderstood by many organisations using the ICAM process, where there is apparent confusion about how and when to use the PEEPO process.
The benefit of using PEEPO for data collection is that it disciplines the Investigator to consider data across all five areas, mitigating assumptions, bias, and early conclusions.
Guidance checklists and check questions for these five areas are provided in our ICAM Training to assist in completing PEEPO Mark #1 efficiently and effectively.
Common Challenges
Some of the common challenges we often find our clients have in relation to data collection include:
Best Practice Tips