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Episode 192: Better Information

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Manage episode 508567524 series 3479322
Content provided by Dr. Mark A French. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Mark A French or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of the Leading and Learning Through Safety Podcast, Dr. Mark French explores how occupational fatalities and serious injuries are often underreported—or poorly reported—by the media. He emphasizes that every worker who leaves for the day but does not return home deserves more than a passing mention in the news. Instead, incidents are too frequently summarized through obituaries or crowdfunding pages, leaving little information for professionals to analyze, learn from, and use to prevent future tragedies
Dr. French highlights several recent cases: a young father fatally injured in a meat processing facility, an electrician killed on a construction site, a farmer entangled in machinery, and a series of industrial tragedies involving robotics and heavy equipment. Too often, media accounts fail to ask the critical questions—what equipment was involved, were safety systems in place, was training adequate, were emergency responses effective? Without such information, accountability and opportunities for prevention are lost
He also notes a rare case of more comprehensive reporting, where a food facility fatality was covered with statements from both labor organizations and the company. While still limited, this coverage at least acknowledged the gravity of the event.

French closes by urging leaders and media alike to demand more transparency—not to assign blame, but to learn and build safer workplaces. Meaningful coverage fosters accountability, empathy, and prevention. As safety professionals and leaders, we must advocate for deeper reporting so tragedies can drive real change

  continue reading

195 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 508567524 series 3479322
Content provided by Dr. Mark A French. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Mark A French or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of the Leading and Learning Through Safety Podcast, Dr. Mark French explores how occupational fatalities and serious injuries are often underreported—or poorly reported—by the media. He emphasizes that every worker who leaves for the day but does not return home deserves more than a passing mention in the news. Instead, incidents are too frequently summarized through obituaries or crowdfunding pages, leaving little information for professionals to analyze, learn from, and use to prevent future tragedies
Dr. French highlights several recent cases: a young father fatally injured in a meat processing facility, an electrician killed on a construction site, a farmer entangled in machinery, and a series of industrial tragedies involving robotics and heavy equipment. Too often, media accounts fail to ask the critical questions—what equipment was involved, were safety systems in place, was training adequate, were emergency responses effective? Without such information, accountability and opportunities for prevention are lost
He also notes a rare case of more comprehensive reporting, where a food facility fatality was covered with statements from both labor organizations and the company. While still limited, this coverage at least acknowledged the gravity of the event.

French closes by urging leaders and media alike to demand more transparency—not to assign blame, but to learn and build safer workplaces. Meaningful coverage fosters accountability, empathy, and prevention. As safety professionals and leaders, we must advocate for deeper reporting so tragedies can drive real change

  continue reading

195 episodes

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