Imagen de portada del espectáculo The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

Podcast de Dr. Ayers/Applied Safety and Environmental Management

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Tecnología y ciencia

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Interviews along with a Q&A format answering questions about safety. Together we‘ll help answer not just safety compliance but the strategy and tactics to implement injury elimination/severity.

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311 episodios

Portada del episodio The Leader's Role in Hazard Prevention

The Leader's Role in Hazard Prevention

Hazard prevention is not a technical function—it’s a leadership behavior. Leaders prevent hazards by shaping the environment, expectations, and conditions in which work happens.   🔍 1. Prevention Starts Before the Work Begins Leaders influence hazards long before workers touch the job. They prevent hazards by ensuring: * Clear expectations * Realistic timelines * Adequate staffing * Proper tools and materials * Thoughtful planning Most hazards emerge from organizational decisions, not worker actions.   👀 2. Leader Presence = Early Hazard Detection Leaders who are present in the field: * See work as it’s actually performed * Catch weak signals early * Build trust so workers speak up * Understand real‑world constraints Presence is one of the most powerful hazard‑prevention tools.   🗣️ 3. Communication Shapes Hazard Awareness Leaders prevent hazards by communicating: * Simple, repeatable messages * Clear priorities * Why certain controls matter * What “good” looks like If workers can’t repeat the message, they can’t act on it.   🧰 4. Leaders Remove Barriers to Safe Work Workers often know the hazards—they just lack the means to fix them. Leaders prevent hazards by: * Providing resources * Fixing recurring issues quickly * Reducing production pressure * Modeling safe behaviors Hazard prevention is a resource decision, not a paperwork exercise.   📊 5. Prevention Is Measured Upstream, Not by Injury Rates Lagging indicators don’t show prevention. Leaders should track: * Near misses * First‑time quality * Worker concerns * Small operational failures * Housekeeping and organization These weak signals reveal whether prevention is actually happening.   🎯 Episode Takeaway Hazard prevention is a leadership function. Leaders prevent hazards by shaping conditions, removing barriers, staying present, and reinforcing expectations—not by reacting to incidents.

25 de may de 2026 - 6 min
Portada del episodio One Reason Why Employees Stop Reporting Near-Misses

One Reason Why Employees Stop Reporting Near-Misses

Episode 309 explains that when leaders and the system fail to close the loop on reports or respond with blame, employees learn that reporting near‑misses is futile or dangerous, so they stop doing it. Dr. Ayers illustrates this with a personal near‑miss from 35 years ago that was met with suspicion rather than support, showing how cultural signals can shut down reporting for decades. Key points (what the episode emphasizes) * Lack of visible action kills reporting. When reports produce no fix, no follow‑up, and no communication, employees conclude reporting doesn’t matter. * Blame and negative reactions create fear. Even subtle responses—eye‑rolling, questioning motives, or lecturing—teach workers that reporting carries personal risk. * Mixed signals from supervisors matter more than policy. Phrases like “we don’t have time” or “just be careful” communicate that production beats safety, so workers self‑silence. * Assumptions and friction reduce reports. Employees sometimes assume leadership already knows about hazards or find the reporting process too cumbersome, so they don’t bother. Three leader actions the episode recommends (ready to use today) 1. Close the loop every time. Acknowledge reports immediately, explain next steps, and follow up with outcomes—even if the fix is delayed. Visible follow‑through rebuilds trust. (ca://s?q=Close_the_loop_on_reports) 2. Respond with curiosity, not blame. Train supervisors to ask “What happened?” and “How can we prevent it?” instead of assigning fault; this reduces fear and increases psychological safety. (ca://s?q=Curiosity_not_blame) 3. Make reporting easy and visible. Simplify the process, remove paperwork friction, and publicly recognize reporters so reporting is seen as contribution, not complaining. Why this matters Reporting is a leadership and system problem, not an employee problem. When leaders model safety, act visibly on reports, and remove blame, reporting returns—and hazards get fixed before they become incidents. The episode’s practical examples show that small, consistent leader behaviors change culture faster than more rules or forms.

24 de may de 2026 - 6 min
Portada del episodio Compliance and Conversations

Compliance and Conversations

Compliance improves most effectively through conversations, not commands. Dr. Ayers emphasizes that safety leaders must shift from “telling employees what the rule is” to engaging them in dialogue that builds understanding, ownership, and trust.   1. Compliance is the minimum, not the goal Dr. Ayers reinforces that OSHA compliance is the floor, not the ceiling. * Compliance alone does not eliminate injuries. * Conversations help uncover the why behind unsafe behaviors. * Leaders must move from “Are we compliant?” to “Are we learning and improving?”   2. Conversations reveal the real barriers to safe work Employees often know the rule—but conversations uncover: * Production pressures * Confusing procedures * Missing tools or PPE * Poorly designed workflows * Misaligned expectations These insights rarely surface through audits alone.   3. The leader’s tone determines the outcome Dr. Ayers stresses that safety conversations must be: * Respectful * Curious, not accusatory * Focused on understanding, not blame Employees shut down when they feel interrogated. They open up when they feel heard.   4. Use questions to drive engagement He highlights simple, high‑impact questions such as: * “What makes this task difficult?” * “What would make this safer or easier?” * “What slows you down?” * “What do you wish leadership understood about this job?” These questions turn compliance checks into collaborative problem‑solving.   5. Conversations build trust—and trust builds compliance When employees trust the safety leader: * They report hazards earlier * They admit mistakes * They ask for help * They follow procedures more consistently Trust is the multiplier that makes compliance sustainable.   6. Documentation still matters—but it’s not the priority Dr. Ayers reminds leaders that: * Documentation supports compliance * But documentation never replaces conversations * Leaders should document after the discussion, not instead of it The real work happens in the field, not in the office.   Key Takeaways for Safety Leaders * Compliance improves through relationships, not reminders. * Conversations uncover the real reasons behind unsafe conditions. * Ask questions that invite employees to share their expertise. * Trust is the foundation of a strong safety culture. * Documentation supports compliance but should never replace engagement.

15 de may de 2026 - 8 min
Portada del episodio AI Prompting and Occupational Safety

AI Prompting and Occupational Safety

Janel Penaflor (253-214-9484) of Safetysenseinc.com explains that the real power of AI in safety isn’t the technology itself — it’s the quality of the prompts safety professionals use. Good prompting turns AI into a force multiplier for hazard analysis, documentation, training, and decision‑making. Poor prompting leads to generic, unreliable output. The episode focuses on how safety leaders can use structured prompting to get accurate, actionable results.   🔑 Key Themes & Insights 1. AI is only as good as the prompt Janel emphasizes that AI doesn’t “think” — it responds to direction. Effective prompts are: * Clear * Context‑rich * Specific about the desired output * Tailored to the safety task This is the difference between a vague summary and a supervisor‑ready training tool.   2. Structured prompting improves safety workflows Janel breaks down how safety professionals can use prompting to: * Draft JHAs, SOPs, and toolbox talks * Summarize incidents and inspections * Generate training outlines * Analyze trends in hazard reports * Create communication materials for supervisors Structured prompts reduce time spent on paperwork and increase time in the field.   3. AI helps uncover patterns humans miss With the right prompts, AI can: * Identify recurring hazards * Highlight leading indicators * Compare similar incidents * Suggest preventive actions This shifts safety from reactive to proactive.   4. Human oversight is non‑negotiable Janel stresses that AI: * Must be validated * Should never replace field verification * Needs context from real‑world operations * Can amplify bias if prompts are poorly designed AI supports safety leaders — it does not replace them.   5. Practical prompting frameworks for safety Janel shares simple, repeatable structures such as: Role → Task → Context → Output Format Example: “You are a safety manager. Create a supervisor‑ready toolbox talk on ladder inspections. Include examples, questions to ask the crew, and a 3‑step action list.” This produces consistent, high‑quality results.   🎯 Episode Takeaway AI becomes a powerful safety tool when leaders use clear, structured prompts and maintain human oversight. Prompting is now a core skill for modern safety professionals — one that improves documentation, communication, hazard analysis, and overall safety culture.

2 de may de 2026 - 27 min
Portada del episodio Janel Penaflor - AI Usage in Safety

Janel Penaflor - AI Usage in Safety

Janel Penaflor (253-214-9484) of Safetysenseinc.com [https://www.linkedin.com/safety/go/?url=Safetysenseinc.com&urlhash=CWlf&isSdui=true&lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_profile_view_base_contact_details%3BC9eEcwpfSamBtoNPy5ORwg%3D%3D] explains how AI is transforming the safety profession, not by replacing safety leaders, but by amplifying their ability to identify hazards, analyze data, and make better decisions faster. The episode focuses on practical, real‑world applications—not hype.   🔑 Key Themes & Insights 1. AI is a tool, not a replacement for safety professionals Janel emphasizes that AI augments human judgment. It helps: * Spot patterns humans miss * Process large volumes of data quickly * Reduce administrative burden But it cannot replace field experience, context, or leadership.   2. AI improves hazard identification and trend analysis AI tools can: * Analyze incident reports * Detect recurring hazards * Flag leading indicators * Predict where risks may increase This allows safety teams to shift from reactive to proactive prevention.   3. AI helps streamline safety workflows Janel highlights several practical uses: * Automating documentation * Drafting JHAs, SOPs, and training materials * Summarizing inspections or audits * Organizing large datasets * Speeding up root‑cause analysis This frees safety leaders to spend more time in the field.   4. AI reduces bias and increases consistency AI can help standardize: * Risk assessments * Report reviews * Training content * Corrective action tracking This reduces variability between supervisors and shifts.   5. Human oversight is essential Janel stresses that AI: * Needs guardrails * Must be validated * Should never be used blindly * Requires ethical use and data privacy awareness Safety leaders must remain the decision‑makers, not the AI.   6. AI can strengthen safety culture When used well, AI: * Improves communication * Makes safety information more accessible * Helps supervisors respond faster * Supports more consistent follow‑up This builds trust and reinforces safety as a shared value.   🎯 Episode Takeaway AI is a force multiplier for safety leaders. It enhances hazard recognition, speeds up analysis, and improves consistency—but it still relies on human judgment, field experience, and leadership to be effective.

24 de abr de 2026 - 29 min
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
MI TOC es feliz, que maravilla. Ordenador, limpio, sugerencias de categorías nuevas a explorar!!!
Me suscribi con los 14 días de prueba para escuchar el Podcast de Misterios Cotidianos, pero al final me quedo mas tiempo porque hacia tiempo que no me reía tanto. Tiene Podcast muy buenos y la aplicación funciona bien.
App ligera, eficiente, encuentras rápido tus podcast favoritos. Diseño sencillo y bonito. me gustó.
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La App va francamente bien y el precio me parece muy justo para pagar a gente que nos da horas y horas de contenido. Espero poder seguir usándola asiduamente.

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