However this particular system of work (to call for help as a lone worker) had serious shortcomings. First, the team had been informed by e-mail that they were responsible for setting up their own phones to call out on the number “5” speed-dial. Quite predictably, the staff team were not 100% compliant in achieving this set-up, which is the first point at which this expensive lone worker safety device ‘system’ was starting to fall over.
The number “5” was chosen because, we have been told, every number “5” on every mobile phone keypad has a raised ‘dot’ area on it which identifies it as the number “5” button.
Sure enough, we find this to be true, even though the prominence and positioning of the 5- dot varies widely. In some cases it is off center, perhaps closer to the top of the button. When we say the top button, we mean when the phone is in an upright position of course...not upside-down inside a pocket or handbag...and perhaps this all assumes you are not using a smartphone whose keypad is a flat touchscreen with a keypad lock on it.
Details, details are important when you call for help as a lone worker!
A proposed experiment for Lone Worker Safety Devices
What would we observe staff to do, in a moment when they are exposed to highly aroused and aggressive individuals who are threatening physical violence to them, to the point where we know they are beginning to experience the physiological effects mentioned above?
We want them to find and press the number 5 button (and only that button, seeing as speed dialling any other number will be ineffective). The worker who is calling for help may or may not be looking directly at the number and must achieve the task with fingers that are numb, shaking and de-sensitised by the action of cortisol and adrenaline in their bloodstream, causing vaso-constriction and robbing them of fine motor control.
They might have to look at the phone....to find the numbers, if their vision allows them to do so.
All the while of course, our “assailant” role player will be applying heat to the system, aggressive, posturing and threatening, continually firing up the worker’s innate survival system, hidden deep within their brain in the tiny and primitive Amygdala fear-centre.
The result is fairly predictable....system-failure in most of the scenarios, dependent largely on the Awareness and Preparedness and Mindset of the workers we might test in this hypothetical experiment.
The better prepared, more aware and more focussed the person on the task immediately to hand, the better they will perform in accessing their lone worker safety device.
There is a concept of ‘Stress Inoculation’ which applies very often to staff in aggressive scenarios - simply put it says that the more experienced someone is in facing a particular type of stressor (such as aggression), the less impact their primal survival responses will have on their behaviour.