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PreAccident Investigation Podcast

PreAccident Investigation Podcast

Todd Conklin

611 episodesEN

Show overview

PreAccident Investigation Podcast has been publishing since 2020, and across the 6 years since has built a catalogue of 611 episodes. That works out to roughly 180 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.

Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 3 min and 30 min — with run-times ranging widely across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Government & Organizations show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed yesterday, with 26 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Todd Conklin.

Episodes
611
Running
2020–2026 · 6y
Median length
21 min
Cadence
Several per week

From the publisher

The Pre Accident Podcast is an ongoing safety podcast conversation of Human Performance, Systems Safety, & Safety Culture.

Latest Episodes

View all 611 episodes

PAPod 604 - On the Edge: Risks, Resilience, and Red Bull’s Adventure Athlete

Jun 27, 202632 min

PAPod 603 - Procedures: The Double-Edged Sword of Safety

Jun 20, 202620 min

PAPod 602 - From Brazil with Safety: Gilval and the New View Revolution

Jun 13, 202633 min

PAPod 601 - Rethinking Safety: AI, Pre-Jobs, and the Power of Listening

Jun 6, 202635 min

PAPod 600 - The Future of Safety: Learning Teams, Storytelling, and Not-Knowing

May 30, 202624 min

PAPod 599 - Learn Like Bob: How Pediatric Teams Saved 30,000 Babies

May 23, 202631 min

PAPod 598 - What If Risk Never Leaves? Exploring Transportable Hazards

May 16, 202616 min

PAPod 597 - From the way, way, way, way, back machine...Pain as a Predictor: Martha Acosta on Finding the Signals Before Failure

May 9, 202621 min

PAPod 596 - Incremental Safety Practices: Reductive vs. Inductive Safety

May 2, 202620 min

PAPod 595 - Beyond Checklists: How Conversations Transform Safety Culture

Apr 25, 202630 min

PAPod 594 - Bridging Cultures: Safety, Migrant Workers, and the Heart of Agribusiness

Apr 18, 202630 min

Ep 958PAPod 593 - Young Voices, System Thinking: A Conversation on Safety with Mousa Yassin

Host Todd chats with Mousa Yassin about shifting safety culture from blaming individuals to designing systems that tolerate failure and recover quickly. They cover life-saving rules, the concept of recoverability, lessons from software engineering like chaos testing, and the importance of learning over punishment. The episode emphasizes practical ways to build resilient systems, nurture learning teams, and make safety training engaging and effective.

Apr 11, 202632 min

Ep 956PAPod 592 - How a Near-Miss Sparked the Learning Team Movement

Todd Conklin tells the origin story of "learning teams," sparked by a self-reported near-miss at Los Alamos involving a postdoc and an arcing wrench. Rather than pursuing a punitive investigation, a group of workers gathered to identify what needed to be learned, uncovering broader gaps in postdoc training and safety planning. The episode explains how learning teams prioritize asking better questions, collecting the right data, and designing system-focused solutions. Conklin describes how this approach spread across the lab and why it remains a fast, effective tool for operational improvement.

Apr 4, 202628 min

Ep 957PAPod 591 - Workers Are the Solution: A Conversation with Corey Pitzer

Todd Conklin talks with Corey Pitzer about fatality prevention, Human and Organizational Performance (HOP), and how safety thinking has shifted globally. They explore controversial views—treating workers as problem-solvers, tensions between engineering/energy-based approaches and systemic/new-view thinking—and use real examples to show why designing systems that absorb variation matters more than trying to eliminate risk.

Mar 28, 202632 min

Ep 955PAPod 590 - Gird Your Loins: NASA, Risk, and the Return of Recrudescence

Todd interviews Professor David Woods about recent NASA mishaps and a growing cultural shift toward "cheaper, faster" decision-making that sacrifices safety. They explore how past safety gains have lost vitality, highlight cascading modern risks (the "messy nine"), and argue for mutual assistance and revitalized resilience practices. Wood's most recent writing on this is available in the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists called: Cheaper, Faster, and Who Gives a Damn about Anything Else. The episode connects space, aviation, cloud outages, and AI-driven engineering to show why coordinated foresight and cross-disciplinary cooperation are essential to prevent far-reaching harm in today’s complex systems.

Mar 21, 202659 min

Ep 954PAPod 589 - Failing Safely: Todd Conklin on Resilience, Recovery, and Real Work

In this episode, Todd Conklin joins Amir Shahzad to discuss human and organizational performance, resilience, and how to design systems that allow failures to be caught and recovered before they become disasters. They explore the gap between work as imagined and work as done, the value of learning from everyday work, and practical steps leaders can take to create safer, more resilient workplaces. They also cover cultural change, the role of procedures, adaptive behavior, and the potential—and risks—of AI in safety, all delivered with a mix of practical advice and light-hearted rapid-fire questions.

Mar 14, 202638 min

Ep 953PAPod 588 - Weak Signals, Big Consequences: The RaDonda Story

Hosts Todd and Brent discuss an upcoming restorative workshop centered on RaDonda Vought's account of the Emory Hospital event. The episode highlights how normal performance variability can combine into serious failures, the value of storytelling, and the importance of learning and building resilience across complex systems. The workshop in Santa Fe (March 31–April 1) invites healthcare and high‑risk industry professionals to move from “what” happened to “how” to apply lessons in practice. For more information or to register, contact [email protected].

Mar 7, 202625 min

Ep 952PAPod 587 - Start in the Black: How Sleep Debt Impacts Safety

Host Todd Conklin interviews fatigue expert Mark Rosekind, PhD about his path from sleep research to roles at NASA, the NTSB, and NHTSA, and how sleep science applies across transportation and safety-critical work. Key takeaways: think of sleep like a bank account (sleep debt), "start in the black" before major schedule changes, the benefits of strategic naps, and systemic ways organizations can reduce fatigue to improve performance, health, and safety.

Feb 28, 202627 min

Ep 951PAPod 586 - VUCA, Uncertainty, and the Case for Innovation

Todd Conklin discusses VUCA (Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, Adaptation) and argues that innovation and safety improve when organizations embrace uncertainty and gather more diverse information and perspectives. He mixes personal travel and Olympics anecdotes, touches on aviation and healthcare examples, and invites listeners to a hands-on workshop to explore these ideas further.

Feb 21, 202618 min

Ep 950PAPod 585 - When Safety Stalls: Who Will Reinvent the Field?

In this clip from the Pre‑Accident Investigation Podcast and Punk Rock Safety, Todd joins Ron, Ben, and David to debate why safety innovation is stalling, where new ideas are coming from, and who’s pushing practice forward. They explore barriers like regulatory pressure, the pull of “normal,” and the difference between improving safety and redesigning work. Using examples from pediatric intensive care and other domains, the conversation highlights pockets of progress, the danger of idea corruption, and the need to embrace experimentation, rethink systems, and find the next generation of thinkers to advance safety practice.

Feb 14, 202631 min
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