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Non‐technical skills for emergency incident management teams: A literature review

Peter Hayes, Chris Bearman, Philip C. Butler, Christine Owen

2020Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Every year, incident management teams (IMTs) coordinate the response to hundreds of emergency events across Australasia. Larger scale emergencies such as a storms, floods, wildfires, oil spills and chemical explosions can place a lot of pressure on an IMT. Non‐technical skills play a central role in the performance of these teams. This article reviewed the broader non‐technical skills (NTS) literature before focusing on the NTS required for emergency management. It was found that most NTS frameworks share four to five common skill categories, although there were greater differences at the element and behavioural marker level. A variety of issues were identified in the literature that highlight that emergency management is very different from other domains where NTS systems have been developed. The literature on NTS in conjunction with this set of issues was used to develop a proposed NTS framework for emergency IMTs. This framework comprises 7 skill categories (i.e. communication, coordination, cooperation, decision‐making, situation awareness, leadership and coping, stress and fatigue management). The 7 skills can be further delineated into 16 elements and 44 behavioural markers. The framework provides a prototype that can form the basis for further research in this area.

Topics & Concepts

Emergency managementVariety (cybernetics)Set (abstract data type)Coping (psychology)Crisis managementPsychologyKnowledge managementProcess managementComputer scienceOperations managementEngineeringPolitical scienceArtificial intelligenceProgramming languagePsychiatryLawOccupational Health and Safety ResearchTeam Dynamics and PerformanceDisaster Response and Management
Non‐technical skills for emergency incident management teams: A literature review | Litcius