Swiss Cheese Model
Swiss Cheese Model
BioMed Central
Open Access
Research article
The Swiss cheese model of safety incidents: are there holes in the
metaphor?
Thomas V Perneger*1,2
Address: 1Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland and 2Quality of Care Service, University Hospitals
of Geneva, CH-1211 Geneva 14, Switzerland
Email: Thomas V Perneger* - [email protected]
* Corresponding author
doi:10.1186/1472-6963-5-71
Abstract
Background: Reason's Swiss cheese model has become the dominant paradigm for analysing
medical errors and patient safety incidents. The aim of this study was to determine if the
components of the model are understood in the same way by quality and safety professionals.
Methods: Survey of a volunteer sample of persons who claimed familiarity with the model,
recruited at a conference on quality in health care, and on the internet through quality-related
websites. The questionnaire proposed several interpretations of components of the Swiss cheese
model: a) slice of cheese, b) hole, c) arrow, d) active error, e) how to make the system safer. Eleven
interpretations were compatible with this author's interpretation of the model, 12 were not.
Results: Eighty five respondents stated that they were very or quite familiar with the model. They
gave on average 15.3 (SD 2.3, range 10 to 21) "correct" answers out of 23 (66.5%) significantly
more than 11.5 "correct" answers that would expected by chance (p < 0.001). Respondents gave
on average 2.4 "correct" answers regarding the slice of cheese (out of 4), 2.7 "correct" answers
about holes (out of 5), 2.8 "correct" answers about the arrow (out of 4), 3.3 "correct" answers
about the active error (out of 5), and 4.1 "correct" answers about improving safety (out of 5).
Conclusion: The interpretations of specific features of the Swiss cheese model varied
considerably among quality and safety professionals. Reaching consensus about concepts of patient
safety requires further work.
Background
James Reason proposed the image of "Swiss cheese" to
explain the occurrence of system failures, such as medical
mishaps [1-5]. According to this metaphor, in a complex
system, hazards are prevented from causing human losses
by a series of barriers. Each barrier has unintended weaknesses, or holes hence the similarity with Swiss cheese.
These weaknesses are inconstant i.e., the holes open and
close at random. When by chance all holes are aligned, the
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Figure
Swiss
cheese
1
model by James Reason published in 2000 (1)
Swiss cheese model by James Reason published in 2000 (1). Depicted here is a more fully labelled black and white version published in 2001 (5). On the survey questionnaire, all labels and comments were hidden.
Methods
Samples and data collection
The data for this cross-sectional survey came from two
sources: paper questionnaires filled by conference delegates, and online questionnaires. A self-completed questionnaire ("the Swiss cheese quiz") was handed out to
attendees of the 20th conference of the International Society for Quality in Health Care (Amsterdam, October 19
22, 2004), at the booth of the International Journal for
Quality in Health Care. Completed questionnaires were
collected in a ballot box. The same questionnaire was also
posted on the internet [7]. Links to this site were placed on
the access page of the International Journal for Quality in
Health Care and the home page of the International Society for Quality in Health Care between November 2004
and January 2005.
Questionnaire
The questionnaire displayed the picture of the Swiss
cheese model, as published in the BMJ [1], but with the
words "hazards" and "losses" hidden. The figure was followed by this statement: "As with many metaphors, there
are several ways of interpreting this model. We would like
to know your own interpretation. There are no right or
wrong answers." The first questions probed the familiarity
of the respondent with the model and its perceived usefulness. Further questions addressed the interpretation of
various aspects of the Swiss cheese model: what is represented by a slice of cheese, by a hole, and by the arrow,
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Table 1: Interpretation of the Swiss cheese model of medical error by 85 professionals who claimed to be fairly or very familiar with
the model.
Compatibility with
Swiss cheese model
N (%) endorsing
statement
Percent "correct"
answers
Sometimes3
yes
no
yes
yes
14 (16.5)
61 (71.8)
9 (10.6)
14 (16.5)
52 (61.2)
71.8
89.4
16.5
61.2
yes
no
yes
yes
yes
28 (32.9)
5 (5.9)
53 (62.4)
54 (63.5)
17 (20.0)
32.9
94.1
62.4
63.5
20.0
no
no
no
Sometimes4
yes
29 (34.1)
2 (2.4)
24 (28.2)
51 (60.0)
41 (48.2)
65.9
97.6
71.8
48.2
no
no
yes
no
no
10 (11.8)
24 (28.2)
26 (30.6)
24 (28.2)
28 (32.9)
88.2
71.8
30.6
71.8
67.1
How can we make the health care system safer, using the "Swiss cheese" metaphor?
By adding a slice of cheese
yes
By removing a slice of cheese
no
By plugging a hole
yes
By adding a hole
no
By making all slices thinner
no
27 (31.8)
6 (7.1)
76 (89.4)
1 (1.2)
6 (7.1)
31.8
92.9
89.4
98.8
92.9
1 Latent
error: Failure of system design that increases the probability of harmful events. Loosely equivalent to causal factor or contributing factor.
error: Error (of commission or omission) committed at the interface between a human and a complex system.
3 A professional whose role is to make the process of care safer may be thought of as a protective barrier
4 This would be true if the error equates with patient harm, as in the case of wrong site surgery
2 Active
The analysis consisted of simple frequencies of endorsement for each proposed answer. Endorsement of an item
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Results
Sample characteristics
Forty-eight usable questionnaires were collected at the
conference (4 others were incomplete), and 111 on the
internet (11 others were empty, duplicated, only partially
filled, included only "I have no idea" answers, or had all
answer options checked). Eighty-five respondents
(53.5%) stated that they were "very" (N = 45) or "quite"
(N = 40) familiar with the Swiss cheese model. Only these
respondents are reported on in the analyses.
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Discussion
This survey shows that among quality improvement professionals, the meaning of the Swiss cheese model of medical error is far from univocal. On average, respondents
gave answers that were compatible with the model to
about two thirds of the proposed statements. This is better
than half the proportion that would be expected by
chance but far from a general consensus. This suggests
that invoking the Swiss cheese model will not necessarily
lead to effective communication, even among quality and
safety professionals.
There was substantial variability among respondents as to
what the various features of the model represent. The
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Competing interests
The author(s) declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors' contributions
The author conceived the study, pre-tested the questionnaire, collected and analysed the data, and wrote the
paper.
Acknowledgements
Maria-Julia Stonborough and Paul Kidd helped with data collection. Vincent
Baujard created the online version of the questionnaire. No specific funding
was obtained for this study.
References
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Pre-publication history
The pre-publication history for this paper can be accessed
here:
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6963/5/71/prepub
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