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Description

Episode 97 is all about shifting from a reactive safety mindset to a proactive, action‑oriented approach. Dr. Ayers emphasizes that hazard reduction is not a paperwork exercise—it’s a leadership behavior. The episode focuses on how safety leaders and supervisors can build a culture where hazards are identified early and eliminated quickly, long before they turn into incidents.


 
Core Message

Hazards don’t fix themselves. Proactive safety means acting early, acting consistently, and acting with purpose to reduce risk before someone gets hurt.


 
Key Points from the Episode
1. Hazard Reduction Requires Action, Not Observation

Many organizations are good at:

But they struggle with actually fixing hazards. Dr. Ayers stresses that hazard reduction is measured by what gets corrected, not what gets written down.


 
2. Proactive Safety Is About Getting Ahead of Risk

Reactive safety waits for:

Proactive safety:

This is how organizations reduce serious injury potential.


 
3. The “See Something, Do Something” Expectation

Dr. Ayers explains that every employee—not just safety staff—must adopt a simple rule: If you see a hazard, take action. That action might be:

The key is not walking past it.


 
4. Supervisors Are the Key to Proactive Hazard Reduction

Supervisors must:

When supervisors act quickly, workers learn that hazard reduction is a priority.


 
5. Why Hazards Don’t Get Fixed

Common barriers include:

Proactive leaders remove these barriers.


 
6. Build Systems That Make Action Easy

Dr. Ayers recommends:

Systems should make it easier to fix hazards than to ignore them.


 
Practical Takeaway

Proactive hazard reduction is the foundation of a strong safety culture. When leaders and workers consistently take action—not just identify hazards—risk drops, trust grows, and the organization becomes far more resilient.