2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcip.2014.01.005
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Interdependency-induced risk with applications to healthcare

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Cited by 44 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…There is a general agreement that modern societal systems operate under conditions of ambiguity, complexity, emergence, interdependence and uncertainty (Flood and Carson, 1993;Katina et al, 2014b;Skyttner, 2005). Therefore, many researchers have suggested that today's most vexing issues cannot be addressed using reductionist approaches (Capra, 1997;Hammond, 2002;Laszlo, 1996).…”
Section: Systems Theory-based Pathologiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…There is a general agreement that modern societal systems operate under conditions of ambiguity, complexity, emergence, interdependence and uncertainty (Flood and Carson, 1993;Katina et al, 2014b;Skyttner, 2005). Therefore, many researchers have suggested that today's most vexing issues cannot be addressed using reductionist approaches (Capra, 1997;Hammond, 2002;Laszlo, 1996).…”
Section: Systems Theory-based Pathologiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The 21st century landscape is defined by themes of ambiguity -increasing lack of clarity and situational understanding, complexity -large numbers of richly interdependent and dynamically interacting systems with behaviour difficult to predict, emergence -inability to deduce behaviour, structure, or performance from constituent elements, interdependence -mutual influence among complex systems through which the state of a system influences and is influenced by, the state of interconnected systems and uncertainty -incompleteness in understanding, predicting, or controlling of systems (Flood and Carson, 1993;Skyttner, 2005;Katina et al, 2014aKatina et al, , 2014b. Under such conditions, organisations must be viewed as complex interdependent systems rather that simple and isolated systems (Hammond, 2002;Laszlo, 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, it is possible to apply this approach in situations ‘when specific failure rate data is not available’ (Dodson and Nolan,15 p266). This is ideal for the domain of critical infrastructures where data on FMs, effects, causes, occurrences and severity is often unavailable for several reasons including competitive advantages 19. Having described the FAMECA approach, we now move to describe the system of interest—critical healthcare sector.…”
Section: Fameca Methodology Basicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, authors assert that critical healthcare systems share a common theme of being ‘organized to provide the diagnosis and treatment of health problems’ (Jonas, Goldsteen and Goldsteen,23 p6). In this paradigm, a critical healthcare infrastructure can be viewed as a set interdependent system-of-systems integrated to offer a capability beyond any single healthcare system 19. In such a structure, any one failure can cascade due to the ‘bidirectional relationship between two [or more] infrastructures through which the state of each infrastructure influences or is correlated to the state of the other’ (Rinaldi, Peerenboom  and Kelly,7 p14).…”
Section: Critical Healthcare Sector: the Case For The Usamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While undesirable events such as industrial accidents, process and supply chain disruptions, or bankruptcies formerly occurred from known causes and factors, contemporary events usually originate from unanticipated interactions between elements with no visible links [12,[38][39][40]. In tightly connected complex systems and their environment, it creates conditions for cascading events throughout them [10,38,[41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49] due to increased interdependencies [50,51]. Several authors argue that analyzing the performance of complex systems should also imply a careful examination of low level events as well as organizational factors such as safety culture and the incentive system, which shape human performance and affect the risk of errors [37,39,[52][53][54][55][56].…”
Section: Emerging Risks Linked To Humanmentioning
confidence: 99%