Literature DB >> 22317422

Rethinking healthcare as a safety--critical industry.

Robert Lwears1.   

Abstract

The discipline of ergonomics, or human factors engineering, has made substantial contributions to both the development of a science of safety, and to the improvement of safety in a wide variety of hazardous industries, including nuclear power, aviation, shipping, energy extraction and refining, military operations, and finance. It is notable that healthcare, which in most advanced societies is a substantial sector of the economy (eg, 15% of US gross domestic product) and has been associated with large volumes of potentially preventable morbidity and mortality, has heretofore not been viewed as a safety-critical industry. This paper proposes that improving safety performance in healthcare must involve a re-envisioning of healthcare itself as a safety-critical industry, but one with considerable differences from most engineered safety-critical systems. This has implications both for healthcare, and for conceptions of safety-critical industries.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22317422     DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0037-4560

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Work        ISSN: 1051-9815


  3 in total

1.  Resilient Practices in Maintaining Safety of Health Information Technologies.

Authors:  Michael W Smith; Joan S Ash; Dean F Sittig; Hardeep Singh
Journal:  J Cogn Eng Decis Mak       Date:  2014-09

2.  Learning from high risk industries may not be straightforward: a qualitative study of the hierarchy of risk controls approach in healthcare.

Authors:  Elisa G Liberati; Mohammad Farhad Peerally; Mary Dixon-Woods
Journal:  Int J Qual Health Care       Date:  2018-02-01       Impact factor: 2.038

3.  Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-II.

Authors:  Suzanne K Bentley; Shannon McNamara; Michael Meguerdichian; Katie Walker; Mary Patterson; Komal Bajaj
Journal:  Adv Simul (Lond)       Date:  2021-03-29
  3 in total

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