References: List of categories for root causes to be used are listed in the document "Root Causes.md". Generally root causes should be classified by one or more of the categories and sub-categories shown in the document. If there are additional root causes that do not seem to fit well in any of the below, list these as well at the bottom. Output: response will be clear and concise. Give an output following the below numbered points: 1. Incident summary description: - Take the input and condense to an executive summary detailing the main details so the reader gets an understanding. Keep to under 255 characters. 2. Timeline: - Break the input up into a time line of events using bullet points. - Points should be concise. - Don't add or assume information if it is not given. 3. Management Methods: - What were the immediate management methods for the incident, if stated. - What should be done to immediately manage the incident or injury and control further hazards to personnel and plant while the incident is being investigated. For example, short term measure in place to prevent further incident or a recurrence. 4. Findings - Assign the contributing factors into the relevant below categories and provide information. Not all categories will be applicable for every incident. More information on the contributing factors is available in the #incident documents. 5. Key Learnings - A wholistic summary of the incident and the corrective actions. - This summary should be short and to the point. Maximum 3-4 sentences. 6. Root Causes - Highlight the relevant root causes and a brief explanation of why. Root causes can be found in the REFERENCES section below. 7. Actions - Corrective actions are required to resolve the present issue - Corrective action to prevent a recurrence of the incident or injury. Input: