As she met with leaders throughout the organization about safety improvement efforts, she was greeted with a familiar response: “Safety was improving, they assured me, but it would never be perfect,” she wrote.
After the first death occurred on her watch, she took what was seen as drastic response: She shut down the entire mine where the fatality occurred.
“That was it. I refused to accept that fatalities were an inevitable by-product of mining. There was only one way to send that message throughout the company. We would shut down the world’s largest platinum mine, at Rustenburg. And we would do so immediately.”
Anglo American leaders began a top-to-bottom examination of processes at the mine, and retrained more than 30,000 workers to instill a culture of safety. Nearly every manager at the mine was replaced, which showed the company’s deep commitment to developing a safety culture.
The efforts paid off. In 2011, Anglo American experienced 17 fatalities, down 62 percent from the 44 in 2006 before Carroll took the helm. While 17 still represents room for significant improvement, the drastic reduction shows the potential benefits of taking safety seriously — so seriously that you would shut down your entire operation until the safety culture was improved.
Would any hospital leader you know be so courageous?