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Safety Flash Reporting

Contribute to our Safety Flashes

IMCA Safety Flashes and systems for incident reporting and analysis are an important tool for sharing vital information. By publishing them, IMCA helps its members around the world identify potential hazards, share lessons learned and avoid repetition. Safety Flashes should be succinct, specific, factually correct and written in clear language. The Secretariat will assist with this through formatting and checking of the material submitted.

Anonymity

All submissions are handled in the strictest confidence, with information anonymised, checked before issue and published only with clear permission from the originator.

IMCA remains aware that it is sometimes necessary for members to take legal advice before sharing incident information, and we would stress that published Safety Flashes are always completely anonymous. IMCA does encourage members to continue to share information about incidents, hazards and lessons learnt, as far as is reasonably practical.

IMCA Contact

Nicholas Hough
Consultant – Safety and Security
Contact

Review and Approval Process

When a member incident report is received by IMCA, it will firstly be reviewed by a Technical Adviser. A draft ‘IMCA version’ of the incident will be prepared, and this will be sent back for review to the originator. No further action is taken until the originator signals clearly that the incident is ready to be published. Sometimes a number of iterations of this process are required before the incident report is ready for publication.

What should be included?

Members can help by following a number of pointers:

  • Indicating which of the IOGP Life-Saving Rules (if any) were dominant factors in this incident
  • The title should be concise and focus on the main issue
  • The focus should be on lessons learnt and how to prevent a recurrence, rather than on the incident itself
  • The content should be succinct, specific and, as far as possible, a common theme or pattern should be followed:
    • What happened? an incident or an issue will be described
    • Why? What were the immediate causes and, if appropriate, the root causes
    • Learning: what can members learn from this
    • Action: what are the recommendations for members
    • Ideally there should be photographs or illustrations.

A Safety Flash incident report should provide sufficient detail and communicate risks, precautions and necessary actions effectively without releasing information about the people or organisations involved. For further information, please contact the Secretariat.

To contribute use our Submission Template below or email your own format to safetyreports@legacy.imca-int.com.

Download submission template

Third-Party Safety Flashes

Sometimes IMCA receives links or references to incidents published by other organisations (for example, the Marine Safety Forum (MSF)), or to incidents that are otherwise already in the public domain. If it is considered that further sharing of these incidents would be of use and interest to members, we will create a short note within a Safety Flash providing a link to that incident.

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