Henrich Triangle Theory

 


Henrich Triangle Theory





For every severe accident (with serious injury/fatality), there were 29 minor accidents and 300 near misses.

 

This “300-29-1” ratio is known as Heinrich's Law, often depicted in the form of a triangle, which serves as a visual representation of the relative frequency of different accident types.

 

Heinrich is most famous for originating the concept of the “safety pyramid”.

 

This idea proposes that if the number of minor accidents is reduced then there will be a corresponding fall in the number of serious accidents.

 

The triangle was first proposed by Herbert William Heinrich in 1931 and has since been updated and expanded upon by other writers, notably Frank E. Bird.

 

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Use of Heinrich’s Triangle in Safety Management

 

The Heinrich Accident Triangle is also known as the accident triangle or the Bird's triangle.

 

It is an industrial accident prevention theory that shows the relationship between minor accidents, serious accidents, and near misses.

 

The theory proposes that if there are zero accidents in the minor category, you will realise a corresponding reduction in serious accidents.

 

The accident triangle was invented by Herbert William Heinrich in 1931 and expanded and updated by others such as Frank E. Bird.

 

Heinrich based his law on assumptions and the probability that accident numbers are inversely proportional to the accident's severity.

 

Heinrich's Accident Triangle Theory suggested that 88 per cent of all accidents happen due to human decision to carry out an unsafe act.

Frank E. Bird developed the theory further in 1996, basing his development on an analysis of 1.7 million accident reports from about 300 companies.

 

He came up with an amended triangle. It showed a relationship between one serious injury accident and ten minor injury accidents.

 

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It further showed 30 damage-causing accidents to 600 accidents as near misses.

 

Significant workplace injury has ties to the Heinrich pyramid in safety management. Since 1931 when Heinrich created the pyramid, it infiltrated health and safety procedures.

 

Human factors contribute directly to safety incidents, and safety managers should influence their employees to make better choices.

 

Safety professionals must emphasize the near misses proportion to prevent severe harm and the potential of significant injury fatalities.

 

The ultimate aim of the Heinrich Triangle is to widen the bottom of the triangle to identify while analysing the risk behaviours, unsafe acts, unsafe conditions, and near misses avoiding significant injuries.

 

The critical factor is that all identified risk behaviours are analysed using the root cause analysis method.

 

You can use any other problem-solving methodology to identify the root cause and devise ways of terminating it permanently.






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