PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

What your company can learn from NASA tragedies

This weekend marks 11th anniversary of Space Shuttle Columbia disaster

2014-01-31
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Todd Hollingshead
toddh@byu.edu
801-422-8373
Brigham Young University
What your company can learn from NASA tragedies This weekend marks 11th anniversary of Space Shuttle Columbia disaster BYU business professor Peter Madsen has been researching NASA's safety climate ever since the Columbia shuttle broke apart upon re-entering Earth's atmosphere on Feb. 1, 2003.

Specifically, Madsen has been studying and quantifying how the organization recognizes "near-misses"—events where failures were narrowly averted resulting in successful outcomes.

A new study of NASA's safety climate coauthored by Madsen finds that recognition of those near-misses goes up when the significance of a project is emphasized, and when organizational leaders emphasize safety relative to other goals (like efficiency).

In other words, if you want to avert disasters, your employees need to feel like their work has greater significance, and they need to know that their leaders value safety.

"It is challenging for people to see something that didn't have an overtly bad outcome as a near-miss," Madsen said. "It's part of human nature: We tend to over-weigh what happened instead of what could have happened. But that can be changed by effective leadership."

Using a database of inflight anomalies for two decades (1989-2010) of unmanned NASA missions, the researchers found when NASA leadership emphasized the significance of projects and emphasized the importance of safety, the organization recognized near-misses for what they were instead of passing them off as successes.

The findings, which appear in the Journal of Management, can be implemented by company leaders in a number of industries where safety is paramount, including transportation, power generation, extraction and healthcare.

"If you're in an industry where safety is important and you really want your employees to pay attention to it, it takes not just talking about it, but backing it up," he said. "Employees are very good at picking up the signals that managers are giving about what they really value."

The same has been true for NASA over the years, Madsen found. When leaders have carried out those two steps—increasing the safety climate and emphasizing the significance of projects—near-misses have been better catalogued and used to improve operations.

Unfortunately, Columbia launched during an era of low near-miss reporting at NASA.

An investigation into the crash revealed that the failure that ultimately doomed the Columbia (foam debris striking the orbiter) happened on at least seven prior launches. On each of those, good fortune intervened. They were near-misses that became successes.

NASA's own Columbia Accident Investigation Board identified NASA's safety climate as a primary cause for its inability to see foam loss as a near-miss, stating, "NASA had conflicting goals of cost, schedule, and safety. Safety lost out."

"A lot of safety improvements have happened after a disaster and they shine light on the deficiencies in the system," Madsen said. "If you can pick up on those deficiencies before something happens, that's the gold standard."

Madsen's connections to NASA go back to the time of Columbia's loss, when he was in graduate school at U.C. Berkeley. His dissertation adviser was a well-known organizational safety expert, which led to Madsen and other Ph.D. students being assigned to work with NASA to research safety procedures.

He's continued his contacts with NASA ever since and Edward W. Rogers, chief knowledge officer at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, is a coauthor on this study. Robin Dillon, of Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business, served as lead author.

INFORMATION:


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

USF psychologist: Childhood depression may increase risk of heart disease by teen years

2014-01-31
TAMPA, Fla. – Children with depression are more likely to be obese, ...

RI Hospital researchers identify components in C. diff that may lead to better treatment

2014-01-31
PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Rhode Island Hospital researchers have identified components in Clostridium ...

Researchers create database to examine vast resources of health legacy foundations

2014-01-31
CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Jan. 30, 2014 - Local communities can expect the number and asset size of philanthropic foundations to increase, due to the rise in health ...

A detailed look at HIV in action

2014-01-31
The human intestinal tract, or gut, is best known for its role in digestion. But this collection of organs also plays a prominent ...

Third-hand smoke shown to cause health problems

2014-01-31
RIVERSIDE, Calif. — Do not smoke and do not allow yourself to be exposed ...

New study finds differences in concussion risk between football helmets

2014-01-31
Football helmets can be designed to reduce the risk of concussions, according to a new study by some of the nation's leading concussion researchers published today in the Journal of Neurosurgery. The study ...

Secrets of potato blight evolution could help farmers fight back

2014-01-31
Scientists ...

Lemur lovers sync their scents

2014-01-31
DURHAM, N.C. -- The strength of a lemur couple's bond is reflected by the similarity of their scents, finds a new study. "It's like singing a duet, but with ...

New study finds no reason to replace fructose with glucose

2014-01-31
TORONTO, Feb. 1, 2014 – Researchers at St. Michael's Hospital have found there is no benefit in replacing fructose, the sugar most commonly blamed for obesity, with glucose in commercially prepared ...

Use of testosterone therapy linked to heart attacks in men under 65, study shows

2014-01-30
You may have seen one of the many advertisements geared toward men asking if they suffer from "low T" — low testosterone levels that, according to the ads, can result ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Novel discovery reveals how brain protein OTULIN controls tau expression and could transform Alzheimer's treatment

How social risk and “happiness inequality” shape well-being across nations

Uncovering hidden losses in solar cells: A new analysis method reveals the nature of defects

Unveiling an anomalous electronic state opens a pathway to room-temperature superconductivity

Urban natives: Plants evolve to live in cities

Folklore sheds light on ancient Indian savannas

AI quake tools forecast aftershock risk in seconds, study shows

Prevalence of dysfunctional breathing in the Japanese community and the involvement of tobacco use status: The JASTIS study 2024

Genetic study links impulsive decision making to a wide range of health and psychiatric risks

Clinical trial using focused ultrasound with chemotherapy finds potential survival benefit for brain cancer patients

World-first platform for transparent, fair and equitable use of AI in healthcare

New guideline standardizes outpatient care for adults recovering from traumatic brain injury

Physician shortage in rural areas of the US worsened since 2017

Clinicians’ lack of adoption knowledge interferes with adoptees’ patient-clinician relationship

Tip sheet and summaries Annals of Family Medicine November/December 2025

General practitioners say trust in patients deepens over time

Older adults who see the same primary care physician have fewer preventable hospitalizations

Young European family doctors show moderate readiness for artificial intelligence but knowledge gaps limit AI use

New report presents recommendations to strengthen primary care for Latino patients with chronic conditions

Study finds nationwide decline in rural family physicians

New public dataset maps Medicare home health use

Innovative strategy trains bilingual clinic staff as dual-role medical interpreters to bridge language gaps in primary care

Higher glycemic index linked to higher lung cancer risk

Metabolism, not just weight, improved when older adults reduced ultra-processed food intake

New study identifies key mechanism driving HIV-associated immune suppression 

Connections with nature in protected areas

Rodriguez and Phadatare selected for SME's 30 Under 30

Nontraditional benefits play key role in retaining the under-35 government health worker

UC Irvine-led study finds global embrace of integrative cancer care

From shiloh shepherds to chihuahuas, study finds that the majority of modern dogs have detectable wolf ancestry

[Press-News.org] What your company can learn from NASA tragedies
This weekend marks 11th anniversary of Space Shuttle Columbia disaster