Systematic incident command training and organisational competence

Author:

Lamb Katherine,Farrow Malcolm,Olymbios Costa,Launder David,Greatbatch Ian

Abstract

PurposeThe study aims to determine if the application of a systematic command training system (Effective Command) could influence the organisational competency profile, through the identification, training and assessment of key behavioural markers.Design/methodology/approachThe Effective Command framework is aligned to UK National Fire Service role-maps and is routinely used in both development and assessment of Fire Officers worldwide. Data from 1,261 formal assessments were analysed and descriptive statistics performed.FindingsStructured analysis of incident command assessment data should inform subsequent training cycles of individuals, organisations and procedures. Key behavioural markers were identified in Level 1 (L1) and Level 2 (L2) commanders which influence assessment outcomes. Reduced competence scores between L1 and L2 officers were recorded, providing a strong argument for a supported development process for L2 officers.Practical implicationsSix key behavioural markers were identified in L1 commanders, all were associated with information comprehension and evaluation, which ultimately impacted the outcomes of formal assessments. This study provides empirical evidence that frequent incident or scenario exposure, coupled with metacognitive understanding of the decision rationale could reverse these weaknesses and turn them into individual strengths. This in-depth analysis of data generated in individuals who pass or fail these assessments should strengthen organisational learning.Originality/valueThe use of a structured command training framework contributes significantly to operational assurance by providing a robust assessment and training methodology, which ensures that organisations can appoint, train and assess their incident commanders.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Management Science and Operations Research,Safety Research

Reference33 articles.

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2. Brunacini, A. (2002), “Incident command functions”, Incident Command: Tales from the Hot Seat, Routledge, doi: 10.4324/9781315252483.

3. A critical evaluation of the incident command system and NIMS;Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management,2006

4. Development of a behavioural marker system for incident command in the UK fire and rescue service: THINCS;Cognition, Technology and Work,2020

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