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Safety I and Safety II


From Safety-I to Safety-II: A White Paper - NHS England

A. Safety-II approach assumes that everyday performance variability provides the adaptations that are needed to respond to varying conditions, and hence is the ...

Safety-I and Safety-II - Erik Hollnagel

In contrast to the traditional view, resilience engineering maintains that 'things go wrong' and 'things go right' for the same basic reasons. This corresponds ...

Resilient Healthcare and the Safety-I and Safety-II Frameworks

Resilient healthcare reflects the capacity of the entire healthcare system to adjust to challenges and changes while maintaining high-quality care.

From Safety-I to Safety-II: A White Paper. | PSNet

To enhance patient safety, researchers must consider complexity in health care settings. This white paper describes the difference between two approaches to ...

Safety I and Safety II: An explainer

Safety I – often thought of as “traditional safety” – includes incident investigations and lagging indicators such as total recordable incident rate and days ...

Safety-II: A Proactive Approach to Positive Outcomes

Safety-II takes a broader, more proactive approach, evaluating the ability to succeed in varying conditions and not focusing only on negative ...

Safety-I and Safety-II - RCOG

Safety-I is defined as 'a state where as few things as possible go wrong'. Safety-I mirrors society where in life we pay more attention to the negative things.

From Safety-I to Safety-II: A White Paper - SKYbrary

The safety management principle is to respond when something happens or is categorised as an unacceptable risk. Accordingly, the purpose of accident ...

Safety I vs Safety II: An overview - SAFETY4SEA

Safety I takes accidents as the focus point and tries to prevent bad things from occurring, while Safety-II is emphasizing on ensuring that as ...

The problem with making Safety-II work in healthcare

The Safety-II perspective aspires to overcome this paradox by bringing into focus situations where safety is actually present, that is, in everyday work that ...

The Safety-II approach: Learning from what goes right

Using this approach, Incident Reporting Committees look at a sequence of events and establish the logical link(s) between the incident and its ...

A risk science perspective on the discussion concerning Safety I ...

Safety I and II were introduced by Hollnagel and Safety III by Leveson, and the present paper focuses its analysis on perspectives and interpretations provided ...

(PDF) Erik Hollnagel: Safety-I and Safety-II, the past and future of ...

The main idea of the Dr. Hollnagel's book is to change the classical safety analysis process that focuses mainly on negative causes and impacts of unwanted ...

Safety II: Translating Theory into Practice

Safety-I and Safety-II; the past and future of safety management 2014. Page 5. The Swiss Cheese Model. Page 6. Incident. Page 7. Find and Fix. Page 8 ...

Safety-I, Safety-II and Resilience Engineering - PubMed

In the quest to continually improve the health care delivered to patients, it is important to understand "what went wrong," also known as Safety-I, ...

What kinds of insights do Safety-I and Safety-II approaches provide ...

Reflective study of SHERPA and FRAM use in healthcare. Practical insights into representation of clinical work. Identified qualitative differences in analysis ...

Debrief it all: a tool for inclusion of Safety-II | Advances in Simulation

Safety science in healthcare has historically focused primarily on reducing risk and minimizing harm by learning everything possible from ...

Safety I & Safety II - Psych Safety

Safety I & Safety II (Also known as Safety 1 and 2) ... Safety I can be considered an approach where we try to ensure that “as few things as ...

(PDF) From Safety-I to Safety-II: A White Paper - ResearchGate

From Safety-I to Safety-II: A White Paper, January 2015, DOI:10.13140/RG.2.1.4051.5282, Affiliation: University of Southern Denmark.

Safety-I and Safety-II - Erik Hollnagel

Erik Hollnagel Ph.D., Professor, Professor Emeritus. Hollnagel, E. (2014). Safety-I and Safety-II: The Past and Future of Safety Management. Farnham, UK: ...