'Communication Difficulties' Comes in Third
Monday, February 1st, 2010
BC&A reports that the “Top Ten Threats Cited in EMS ASRA [NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System] Reports:
Mission Preparation/Operational Pressure 93%
Excessive Workload 84%
Communication Difficulties 75%
. . .
Distractions 28%
Pilot 17%
Assume that EMS personnel are trained and are accustomed to working under stress. 75% of the time they consider communication difficulties a threat? What does that mean for the rest of us that do not generally work under stress …. our stress experiences has peaks and valleys.
How many times in a typical day do we ‘visit’ the fight/flight/freeze arena? And how long do we remain that prisoner? When we sense that our unconscious reactions will overtake our conscious actions, we need to focus on the outcome we want, not escaping from the current situation.
How difficult is it for us to communicate clearly the first time? And what are our consequences if we don’t. And how do we know if our meaning and intention are clearly stated? We can take cues from the other person/people, we can restate our communications several times in several different ways, we can ask them to repeat [not regurgitate] what you said … and you can ask for feedback.
It’s not what you said … it’s what they think they heard.

