Fatigue changes more than reaction time

David Brock

In mining, fatigue is usually spoken about as a safety issue.
That is, of course, true.

It is also incomplete.
It is a risk issue.
Reputational risk, commercial risk, environmental risk, personal brand risk and therefore even career risk.

Fatigue rarely arrives as a dramatic moment.
Most of the time, it shows up quietly.
A rushed conversation. A missed detail in a report. A decision that feels reasonable at the time but not so good the next day.

That is part of why fatigue remains hard to deal with properly.
People tend to think of it only when someone is visibly exhausted, or when something serious has already happened.
In reality, fatigue often starts affecting judgment well before that point.

Across mining sites, the pattern is familiar. Good operators, supervisors and technical people push through because work still needs to be done.
Rosters are tight. Shutdowns are demanding. Travel time eats into recovery time. The team is short staffed. The job does not care whether someone slept well.
In the office, it looks like long hours, or working from home at night after a full day at work to take or make calls in differing time zones, responding to the day’s emails or finishing a report.

There is a pressure to push through, and it’s deeply understood in mining. It is also where the long-term risk sits.
Because pushing through once is not usually the issue, but pushing through as a habit is!

Over time, fatigue can narrow thinking.
It can make people more certain than they should be, or less likely to speak up when something does not feel right.
It can make the familiar option seem like the best option simply because it is easier. It can make people rush small decisions that later turn out not to be small at all.

Near misses and Mistakes in judgment occur.
They are underreported, not because people are careless, but because people are tired, busy or feel fatigue and it’s not a good excuse.

An incorrect value in a spreadsheet, a terse response, or the wrong word in a contract isn’t considered a fatigue issue.

The other part that deserves more attention is the end of long swings, or long days. Many of us work across multiple international time zones.
People can still look capable, still sound fine, and still be making decisions with less margin than they realise.
It is also when the risk does not end at the gate or the lift out of the building.
For many in the industry, the drive home or trip back can be one of the more exposed and dangerous time of the day.

None of this is about blaming people for being tired. Mining is hard work. Everyone knows that.
The question is whether we are honest enough to acknowledge what fatigue changes before it becomes visible.
And whether we are modelling the right behaviours, and voicing it to our teams, and that it’s OK to say you are tired, fatigued, didn’t sleep well or just worn out.

Fatigue isn’t always obvious. It changes attention.
It changes communication.
It changes judgment.
And sometimes it changes outcomes long before anyone calls it fatigue.

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