| Literature DB >> 29409645 |
Paulo Victor R de Carvalho1, Angela W Righi2, Gilbert J Huber3, Caio de F Lemos4, Alessandro Jatoba5, José Orlando Gomes6.
Abstract
Emergency response organizations need to be resilient to cope with escalating events resulting from dynamic, unexpected, or complex situations. In Brazil, the Firefighter Corps are military hierarchal organizations with a culture based on fixed structures, well defined norms and procedures. These push against innovations which are necessary to be resilient. This research describes how firefighter captains in the 30-35-year age range managed an emergency response escalation in light of standard operating procedures (SOPs) during a training exercise. The study used ethnographic methods to find and discuss gaps between the instructions and the activities carried out during the exercise, highlighting the differences between work as done (WAD) and work as imagined (WAI), as it was instantiated in the SOP prescriptions. The aim was to produce reflections on WAI and WAD as a way to raise awareness of the need for a cultural change toward resilience in firefighter organizations. This was achieved through firefighter engagement with a comprehensive visualization of the analysis results which afforded easy interaction between the experts, the data, and the researchers.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency response; Resilience engineering; Simulation exercises; WAI and WAD
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29409645 DOI: 10.1016/j.apergo.2017.10.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Ergon ISSN: 0003-6870 Impact factor: 3.661