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Understanding the “Swiss Cheese Model” and Its Application to Patient Safety

Douglas A. Wiegmann, Laura J. Wood, Tara N. Cohen, Scott A. Shappell

2021Journal of Patient Safety109 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT: This article reviews several key aspects of the Theory of Active and Latent Failures, typically referred to as the Swiss cheese model of human error and accident causation. Although the Swiss cheese model has become well known in most safety circles, there are several aspects of its underlying theory that are often misunderstood. Some authors have dismissed the Swiss cheese model as an oversimplification of how accidents occur, whereas others have attempted to modify the model to make it better equipped to deal with the complexity of human error in health care. This narrative review aims to provide readers with a better understanding and greater appreciation of the Theory of Active and Latent Failures upon which the Swiss cheese model is based. The goal is to help patient safety professionals fully leverage the model and its associated tools when performing a root cause analysis as well as other patient safety activities.

Topics & Concepts

Leverage (statistics)Patient safetyHuman errorAccident (philosophy)Root cause analysisRisk analysis (engineering)Root causeComputer scienceKey (lock)NarrativeHealth professionalsMedicineNarrative reviewMEDLINEWorkplace safetyPsychologyWork (physics)Human healthAccident investigationOccupational safety and healthSafety cultureHuman factors and ergonomicsPatient Safety and Medication ErrorsClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsHospital Admissions and Outcomes
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