Systemic problem
A systemic problem is a problem which is a consequence of issues inherent in the overall system,[1][2] rather than due to a specific, individual, isolated factor. Contrast with pilot error, user error, or mistake.
A change to the structure, organization or policies in that system could alleviate the systemic problem. On an Ishikawa diagram (fishbone diagram) of cause-and-effect links, the source of the problem can be said to be a , rather than a .
See also[]
- Systematic error
- Systemic bias – an unbalanced issue due to the system rather than to individuals
- Six Sigma
- Structural fix
- Emergent Properties – individual behavior of subsystems may not predict system behavior as a whole, leading to unforeseen systemic outcomes
External links[]
References[]
- ^ "Health Care Renewal: The NIH: "We Have a Systemic Problem", HCRenewal, 2009, webpage: HCR-syst-prob.
- ^ Monahan, Torin (2009). "Identity Theft Vulnerability: Neoliberal Governance through Crime Construction". Theoretical Criminology. 13 (2). doi:10.1177/1362480609102877. S2CID 145159116.
Categories:
- Quality control
- Systems engineering
- Problem solving
- Systems theory
- Failure