Using a systems-theoretic approach to analyze safety in radiation therapy-first steps and lessons learned

Publication date: February 2020Source: Safety Science, Volume 122Author(s): Natalia Silvis-Cividjian, Wilko Verbakel, Marjan AdmiraalAbstractRadiation therapy is an important technique to treat cancer. Due to the high occupational risks involved, the process is subject to severe safety regulations and standards. However, these standards do not mandate the usage of a particular hazard analysis method. The de facto methods currently used are the reliability theory-based Fault Tree Analysis (FTA) and Healthcare Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (HFMEA). Systems Theoretic Process Analysis (STPA) is a new, essentially different hazard analysis method, based on systems theory. Although successfully applied in many industries, there are only a few reports on STPA implementation in radiation therapy.This paper contributes to filling this gap with a preliminary assessment of STPA applied to a mature Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) process. The analysis was conducted by a team consisting of two experts in radiation therapy and one software systems engineer, with little domain knowledge. 142 potentially unsafe control actions were identified and compared with the results of an earlier HFMEA. The main lesson we have learned is that a graphical, system-wise modeling of the analyzed process, although challenging for beginners, is a powerful instrument to catch the same and even other, new hazards. A causal analysis of a subset of these newly found hazards has led to meaningful...
Source: Safety Science - Category: Occupational Health Source Type: research