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  2. Failure mode, effects, and criticality analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Failure_Mode,_Effects,_and...

    With each on a scale from 1 to 10, the highest RPN is 10x10x10 = 1000. This means that this failure is not detectable by inspection, very severe and the occurrence is almost sure. If the occurrence is very sparse, this would be 1 and the RPN would decrease to 100. So, criticality analysis enables to focus on the highest risks.

  3. Hazard analysis and critical control points - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hazard_analysis_and...

    Hazard analysis and critical control points, or HACCP (/ ˈ h æ s ʌ p / [1]), is a systematic preventive approach to food safety from biological, chemical, and physical hazards in production processes that can cause the finished product to be unsafe and designs measures to reduce these risks to a safe level. In this manner, HACCP attempts to ...

  4. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preferred_reporting_items...

    The aim of the PRISMA statement is to help authors improve the reporting of systematic reviews and meta-analyses. [3] PRISMA has mainly focused on systematic reviews and meta-analysis of randomized trials, but it can also be used as a basis for reporting reviews of other types of research (e.g., diagnostic studies, observational studies).

  5. Child and Adolescent Symptom Inventory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_and_Adolescent...

    The teacher checklist concentrated on behaviors more likely to occur in a school setting. In 1990, Dr. Gabrielle Carlson adapted the parent checklist from the CSI-3R for adolescent use, creating the first version of the Adolescent Symptom Inventory (ASI-3R). With the publication of the DSM-IV in 1994, the CSI-4 emerged to accommodate changes.

  6. Critical appraisal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_appraisal

    Critical appraisal checklists help to appraise the quality of the study design and (for quantitative studies) the risk of bias. Critical appraisal tools for cross-sectional studies are the AXIS, [ 4 ] JBI, [ 5 ] Nested Knowledge [ 6 ] tools; for randomised controlled trials are Nested Knowledge, [ 6 ] Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool, [ 7 ] [ 8 ] JBI ...

  7. Checklist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checklist

    In general, a checklist is a quality management tool, an aid to completing a complex task correctly and completely. It is an aid to recall, provides a reminder of the correct sequence, and uses the operator's knowledge and skill efficiently to ensure that no critical steps are omitted, even when the operator is under stress or has degraded attention due to fatigue or other distractions, It ...

  8. Critical incident technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_incident_technique

    The critical incident technique (or CIT) is a set of procedures used for collecting direct observations of human behavior that have critical significance and meet methodically defined criteria. These observations are then kept track of as incidents, which are then used to solve practical problems and develop broad psychological principles.

  9. Bow-tie diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bow-tie_diagram

    [5] [8] The more complex risk analysis tools of fault tree analysis, event tree analysis use the same principle: Things go wrong, there is a reason for that and a result too, with the result generating the adverse consequences. The bow-tie diagram introduces the concept of a central energy-based event (the "bow tie knot") in which the damaging ...