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Empirical evolution of an evacuation reporting template

Baig, Khadija ; Amos, Martyn ; Gwynne, Steve LU ; Bénichou, Noureddine and Kinateder, Max LU (2024) In Safety Science 175.
Abstract

Evacuation drills are frequently required components of health and safety processes, but they are often documented poorly (if at all), and thus might generate very little useful or actionable information. Given how much drills cost (in terms of potential risk to participants, financial overhead of downtime and restart time, etc.) it is perhaps surprising that even large organizations often lack a standardized form for recording important information about their conduct. The starting point for this paper was the development of such a template form for a large organization. After producing an initial design based on well-established principles, we obtained both quantitative and qualitative feedback from fire safety and evacuation experts.... (More)

Evacuation drills are frequently required components of health and safety processes, but they are often documented poorly (if at all), and thus might generate very little useful or actionable information. Given how much drills cost (in terms of potential risk to participants, financial overhead of downtime and restart time, etc.) it is perhaps surprising that even large organizations often lack a standardized form for recording important information about their conduct. The starting point for this paper was the development of such a template form for a large organization. After producing an initial design based on well-established principles, we obtained both quantitative and qualitative feedback from fire safety and evacuation experts. This then generated a final version of the form design, which was adopted and modified by end-users/emergency planners within the organization to document evacuations. Interviews with three end-users confirmed the usability and usefulness of the form, but they also highlighted second-order observations into emergency procedures (i.e., they generated new information about the organization's protocols that would not otherwise have been foregrounded or recorded). Our form offers a useful starting point for any organization that wishes to record the details of evacuation drills, but a perhaps more unexpected and abiding conclusion is that the process of generating such a form from first principles can – in itself – offer useful and previously inaccessible insights into how an organization conceptualizes and manages its evacuation drills.

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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Building evacuation, Egress, Fire safety, Reporting templates
in
Safety Science
volume
175
article number
106496
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85189681322
ISSN
0925-7535
DOI
10.1016/j.ssci.2024.106496
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
597f49e4-f563-479f-9d4c-3e1d99386c44
date added to LUP
2024-04-23 11:23:11
date last changed
2025-04-04 14:18:39
@article{597f49e4-f563-479f-9d4c-3e1d99386c44,
  abstract     = {{<p>Evacuation drills are frequently required components of health and safety processes, but they are often documented poorly (if at all), and thus might generate very little useful or actionable information. Given how much drills cost (in terms of potential risk to participants, financial overhead of downtime and restart time, etc.) it is perhaps surprising that even large organizations often lack a standardized form for recording important information about their conduct. The starting point for this paper was the development of such a template form for a large organization. After producing an initial design based on well-established principles, we obtained both quantitative and qualitative feedback from fire safety and evacuation experts. This then generated a final version of the form design, which was adopted and modified by end-users/emergency planners within the organization to document evacuations. Interviews with three end-users confirmed the usability and usefulness of the form, but they also highlighted second-order observations into emergency procedures (i.e., they generated new information about the organization's protocols that would not otherwise have been foregrounded or recorded). Our form offers a useful starting point for any organization that wishes to record the details of evacuation drills, but a perhaps more unexpected and abiding conclusion is that the process of generating such a form from first principles can – in itself – offer useful and previously inaccessible insights into how an organization conceptualizes and manages its evacuation drills.</p>}},
  author       = {{Baig, Khadija and Amos, Martyn and Gwynne, Steve and Bénichou, Noureddine and Kinateder, Max}},
  issn         = {{0925-7535}},
  keywords     = {{Building evacuation; Egress; Fire safety; Reporting templates}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Safety Science}},
  title        = {{Empirical evolution of an evacuation reporting template}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssci.2024.106496}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.ssci.2024.106496}},
  volume       = {{175}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}