@inproceedings{0a82754af325477cb99faf66cbd57d78,
title = "Event reporting systems: MERS-TM, surveillance - Seeing and using the data below the waterline",
abstract = "A significant variability in reporting rates, particularly of near-miss events, limits the quantitative reliability of event reporting. Organizations tend to disregard events such as near misses if they are {"}below the waterline{"}, and outside their classification schemes. High reliability organizations, on the other hand, see near misses as valuable information regarding a system's weaknesses. Another value of near-miss reporting is the opportunity to study recovery factors in order to promote recovery once failure occurs. Since transfusion procedures are well-practised routines, they are often performed as automatic behaviours, vulnerable to interruption and unanticipated occurrences. Data fed back from near-miss events are a useful means of countering this, by maintaining an attitude of alertness in task performance.",
keywords = "Alertness, Event reporting, Near misses, Recovery",
author = "Kaplan, \{H. S.\}",
year = "2005",
language = "English",
isbn = "3805579357",
series = "Developments in Biologicals",
pages = "173--177",
editor = "Girish Vyas and Alan Wiliams",
booktitle = "Advances in Transfusion Safety",
}