Academic literature on the topic 'Report incident'

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Journal articles on the topic "Report incident"

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MERRYMAN, PRISCILLA. "THE INCIDENT REPORT." Nursing 15, no. 5 (May 1985): 57–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00152193-198505000-00010.

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Budi, Savitri Citra, Sunartini Hapsara, Fatwa Sari Tetra, and Lutfan Lazuardi. "Incident Report: Between the Shadows of Obligation and Formality." Open Access Macedonian Journal of Medical Sciences 9, E (May 14, 2021): 109–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.3889/oamjms.2021.5949.

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BACKGROUND: Incident reports are the primary data source for monitoring patient safety in the hospital. Monitoring of these reports determines the success of managing safety-related incidents as an effort to improve patient care. Hospital staff plays an essential role in the management of incident reports. Each staff member has a role in managing incident reports. AIM: This article aimed to explore the role of hospital staff in the incident reporting process. METHODS: This qualitative research used an exploratory approach. The research informants were three doctors, 21 nurses, one pharmacist, and two computer administrators. Data were collected using interviews and observations of incident reporting implementation. The research data were analyzed with the qualitative analysis software Atlas.ti. RESULTS: Report management is not done solely for the formality of achieving the target. Implementation of regulations for report management is also done by all hospital staff to prioritize discipline, honesty, and responsibility according to their roles. Staff is expected to report adverse or dangerous events (incidents) that could affect patient safety. The reporting coordinator is responsible for the report’s completeness. Heads of participation room are expected to validate reports. The patient safety team is in charge of analyzing and providing feedback. Supportive attitudes from the board of directors are needed to create a reporting culture. There are several barriers to reporting management, including management support factors, facilities, and an effective feedback system. CONCLUSION: Leaders need to develop staff who focus on discipline, honesty, and responsibility in providing services to patients by prioritizing patient safety. All staff is involved in managing incident reports by playing an active role in following their duties.
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Chin, Yie-Tong, Shui-Long Shen, An-Nan Zhou, and Jun Chen. "Foundation Pit Collapse on 8 June 2019 in Nanning, China: A Brief Report." Safety 5, no. 4 (October 12, 2019): 68. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/safety5040068.

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This short communication reports on the recent incident of a foundation pit collapse at a construction site on 8 June 2019 in Nanning City of Guangxi Province, China. There were no injuries or casualties reported for this incident. This report presents the incident background, management measures taken after the incident, and a brief discussion of the causes of the incident. Some mitigation measures are suggested to prevent similar incidents in the future based on the preliminary analysis.
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Collier, Raymond. "The Obama Administration and Incident Response: A Report." Information & Security: An International Journal 34 (2016): 105–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.11610/isij.3408.

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Morris, M. Robins. "Falsifying an Incident Report." American Journal of Nursing 98, no. 1 (January 1998): 20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00000446-199801000-00033.

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Backus, Bruce, Cheri Hildreth, Mary Beth Mulcahy, and Morgan Christina. "Texas Tech incident report." Journal of Chemical Health and Safety 20, no. 3 (May 2013): 38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jchas.2013.03.202.

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Kurihara, Masaru, Takashi Watari, Jeffrey M. Rohde, Ashwin Gupta, Yasuharu Tokuda, and Yoshimasa Nagao. "Nationwide survey on Japanese residents’ experience with and barriers to incident reporting." PLOS ONE 17, no. 12 (December 1, 2022): e0278615. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278615.

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The ability of any incident reporting system to improve patient care is dependent upon robust reporting practices. However, under-reporting is still a problem worldwide. We aimed to reveal the barriers experienced while reporting an incident through a nationwide survey in Japan. We conducted a cross-sectional survey. All first- and second-year residents who took the General Medicine In-Training Examination (GM-ITE) from February to March 2021 in Japan were selected for the study. The voluntary questionnaire asked participants regarding the number of safety incidents encountered and reported within the previous year and the barriers to reporting incidents. Demographics were obtained from the GM-ITE. The answers of respondents who indicated they had never previously reported an incident (non-reporting group) were compared to those of respondents who had reported at least one incident in the previous year (reporting group). Of 5810 respondents, the vast majority indicated they had encountered at least one safety incident in the past year (n = 4449, 76.5%). However, only 2724 (46.9%) had submitted an incident report. Under-reporting (more safety incidents compared to the number of reports) was evident in 1523 (26.2%) respondents. The most frequently mentioned barrier to reporting an incident was the time required to file the report (n = 2622, 45.1%). The barriers to incident reporting were significantly different between resident physicians who had previously reported and those who had never previously reported an incident. Our study revealed that resident physicians in Japan commonly encounter patient safety incidents but under-report them. Numerous perceived and experienced barriers to reporting remain, which should be addressed if incident reporting systems are to have an optimal impact on improving patient safety. Incident reporting is essential for improving patient safety in an institution, and this study recommends establishing appropriate interventions according to each learner’s barriers for reporting.
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Webb, R. K., M. Currie, C. A. Morgan, J. A. Williamson, P. Mackay, W. J. Russell, and W. B. Runciman. "The Australian Incident Monitoring Study: An Analysis of 2000 Incident Reports." Anaesthesia and Intensive Care 21, no. 5 (October 1993): 520–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0310057x9302100507.

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The Australian Patient Safety Foundation was formed in 1987; it was decided to set up and co-ordinate the Australian Incident Monitoring Study as a function of this Foundation; 90 hospitals and practices joined the study. Participating anaesthetists were invited to report, on an anonymous and voluntary basis, any unintended incident which reduced, or could have reduced, the safety margin for a patient. Any incident could be reported, not only those which were deemed “preventable” or were thought to involve human error. The Mark I AIMS form was developed which incorporated features and concepts from several other studies. All the incidents in this symposium were reported using this form, which contains general instructions to the reporter, key words and space for a narrative of the incident, structured sections for what happened (with subsections for circuitry incidents, circuitry involved, equipment involved, pharmacological incidents and airway incidents), why it happened (with subsections for factors contributing to the incident, factors minimising the incident and suggested corrective strategies), the type of anaesthesia and procedure, monitors in use, when and where the incident happened, the experience of the personnel involved, patient age and a classification of patient outcome. Enrolment, reporting and data-handling procedures are described. Data on patient outcome are presented; this is correlated with the stages at which the incident occurred and with the ASA status of the patients. The locations at which the incidents occurred and the types of procedures, the sets of incidents analysed in detail and a breakdown of the incidents due to drugs are also presented. The pattern and relative frequencies of the various categories of incidents are similar to those in “closed-claims” studies, suggesting that AIMS should provide information of relevance to those wishing to develop strategies to reduce the incidence and/or impact of incidents and accidents.
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Teshima, S., Y. Goto, K. Ueno, and T. Utunomiya. "Fertility clinic incident report – occurrence of incidents and measures taken." Fertility and Sterility 100, no. 3 (September 2013): S152. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fertnstert.2013.07.1537.

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Lee, Yi-Hsuan, Cheng-Chia Yang, and Te-Tsung Chen. "Barriers to incident-reporting behavior among nursing staff: A study based on the theory of planned behavior." Journal of Management & Organization 22, no. 1 (March 4, 2015): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jmo.2015.8.

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AbstractPrevious studies have identified numerous factors that affect incident-reporting behavior. However, few studies have applied an individual psychology perspective to identify and examine the factors affecting the intention of nursing staff to report incidents. We integrate the theory of planned behavior, organizational behavior, psychological behavior, and social exchange theory to identify which factors affect the intentions of nursing staff to report incidents. Samples were collected from nursing staff at 40 regional or larger hospitals for model verification. The results of this study show that psychological safety, attitude toward reporting incidents, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control correlate positively with the intention to report incidents. The perceived cost and perceived benefit of incident reporting directly affects the attitude toward incident-reporting behavior, and self-efficacy influences perceived behavioral control. Furthermore, subjective norms and the perceived benefits of incident reporting mediate the effect of psychological safety on attitude toward incident-reporting behavior.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Report incident"

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Berggren, Marie. "På SoL-sidan : Avvikelsehantering på fem vårdboenden i Uppsala kommun." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för folkhälso- och vårdvetenskap, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-141092.

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En viktig del av den svenska välfärden är kommunens äldreomsorg för personer över 65 år, där Socialtjänstlagen ger rättighet till vårdboende och andra servicetjänster när det behövs. Kommunernas kommunaltjänst ska enligt Socialtjänstlagen vara av god kvalitet. Rapportering av avvikande händelser är en av hörnpelarna i arbetet med att förbättra kvalitet och säkerhet i vården. Avvikelserapportering bidrar till att undvika att negativa händelser upprepas, samt att rutiner förbättras för att höja kvalitet. Genom att ta tillvara möjligheterna med avvikelserapporter kan kvaliteten på vårdboenden förbättras och utvecklas. Denna studie visar på behovet av ytterligare fokus på arbetet med avvikelsehantering gällande omsorg.
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Durand, Marcus L. "The evaluation of methods for the prospective patient safety hazard analysis of ward-based oxygen therapy." Thesis, Cranfield University, 2009. http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/4480.

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When even seemingly benign and routine processes fail in healthcare, people sometimes die. The profound effect on the patient’s families and the healthcare staff involved is clear (Vincent and Coulter, 2002), while further consequences are felt by the institution involved, both financially and by damage to reputation. The trend in healthcare for learning through experience of adverse events is no longer a viable philosophy (Department of Health,Sir Ian Carruthers OBE and Pauline Philip, 2006). In order to make progress towards preventative learning, three Prospective Hazard Analysis (PHA) methods used in other industries were evaluated for use in the area of ward based healthcare. Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA), Fault Tree Analysis (FTA) and Hazard and Operability Analysis (HAZOP) were compared to each other in terms of ease of use, information they provide and the manner in which it is presented. Their results were also compared to baseline data produced through empirical research. Oxygen Therapy was used in this research as an example of a common ward based therapy. The resulting analysis listed 186 hazards almost all of which could lead to death, especially if combined. FTA and FMEA provided better system coverage than HAZOP and identified more hazards than were contained in the initial hazard identification method common to both techniques. FMEA and HAZOP needed some modification before use, with HAZOP requiring the most extensive adjustment. FTA has a very useful graphical presentation and was the only method capable of displaying causal linkage, but required that hazards be translated into events for analysis. It was concluded that formal Prospective Hazard Analysis (PHA) was applicable to this area of healthcare and presented added value through a combination of detailed information on possible hazards and accurate risk assessment based on a combination of expert opinion and empirical data. This provides a mechanism for evidence based identification of hazard barriers and safeguards as well as a method for formal communication of results at any stage of an analysis. It may further provide a very valuable vehicle for documented learning through prospective analysis incorporating feedback from previous experience and adverse incidents. The clear definition of systems and processes that form part of these methods provides a valuable opportunity for learning and the enduring capture and dissemination of tacit knowledge that can be continually updated and used for the formulation of strategies for safety and quality improvement.
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Nordblom, Gustav, and Louise Laiberg. "Riskkommunikation genom flera kommunikationsvägar : En studie baserad på haveriutredningar." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Sjöfartshögskolan (SJÖ), 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-68292.

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Risk communication in a modern maritime environment is unmistakably important but how does it fare against today’s science? This study focuses on a small part of risk communication, namely the differences in using one mean of communication as opposed to multiple means of communication. What positive and negative sides are involved in exchanging information through only one mean of communication as opposed to giving and receiving the information through many?  The method is a literature study and the material ten accident reports made by administrative authorities. The reports have been analyzed and compared to modern subject science literature. The result of the study favor multiple means of communication such as public address systems, signs, general alarm and through the crew. The different ways create a redundancy and succeeds better at reaching a diversity of people. The negative sides, including confusion caused by too much or deviating information, appears to historically have been exaggerated. This is probably due to a false belief that man behaves irrationally in a state of crisis. The risk communication of the future is as such thick in information and comes through multiple means of communication.
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Carson-Stevens, Andrew. "Generating learning from patient safety incident reports from general practice." Thesis, Cardiff University, 2017. http://orca.cf.ac.uk/104070/.

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Internationally, there is an emerging interest in the inadvertent harm caused to patients by the provision of healthcare services. Since the publication of the Institute of Medicine’s report, To Err is Human, in 1999, research and policy directives have predominantly focused on patient safety in hospital settings. More recently, the World Health Organization has highlighted 2-3% of primary care encounters result in a patient safety incident. Given around 330 million general practice consultations occur in the UK each year, unsafe primary care is a poorly understood, major threat to public health. In 2003, a major investment was made in the National Reporting and Learning System to better understand patient safety incidents occurring in England and Wales. Over 40,000 incident reports have arisen from general practice. These have never been systematically analysed, and a key challenge to exploiting these data has been to generate learning from the largely unstructured, free-text descriptions of incidents. My thesis describes the empirical development and application of methods to classify (structure) incident report data. This includes the development of coding frameworks specific to primary care, aligned to the WHO International Classification for Patient Safety, to describe the incident, contributory factors and incident outcomes. I have developed a mixed-methods approach which combines a structured process for coding reports and an exploratory data analysis with subsequent thematic analysis. Analyses of reports can generate hypotheses about priorities for systems improvement in primary care at a local and national level. Existing interventions or initiatives to minimise or mitigate patient safety risks can be identified through scoping reviews. Future research and quality improvement activities should deepen understanding about the risks to patients, and generate knowledge about how interventions made in practice can improve safety.
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Kobes, Shannon K. "Analysis of victim and perpetrator blame in incident reports depicting sexual assault." Virtual Press, 2005. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1318619.

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The relationship between blame attribution, characterological and behavioral blame, and rape and prostitution myth acceptance was investigated. After reviewing an incident report of a sexual assault in which the victim was portrayed as either a prostitute, bank teller, or nun, 291 college-aged participants rated their level of agreement with rape myths and prostitution myths. They also assigned blame to the victim and/or perpetrator of the sexual assault. Results indicated that as rape and prostitution myth acceptance increased, victim blame increased and perpetrator blame decreased. Participants tended to blame the victimized prostitute more for the assault than the victimized bank teller and nun; similarly, participants tended to blame the perpetrator of the nun and bank teller more than the perpetrator of the prostitute. Gender differences in rape and prostitution myth acceptance and blaming attributions were also investigated. The findings are congruent with previous research on rape myth acceptance and blame.
Department of Psychological Science
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Castillo, Jose Carlos. "The User-Reported Critical Incident Method for Remote Usability Evaluation." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/35513.

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Much traditional user interface evaluation is conducted in usability laboratories, where a small number of selected users is directly observed by trained evaluators. However, as the network itself and the remote work setting have become intrinsic parts of usage patterns, evaluators often have limited access to representative users for usability evaluation in the laboratory and the users' work context is difficult or impossible to reproduce in a laboratory setting. These barriers to usability evaluation led to extending the concept of usability evaluation beyond the laboratory, typically using the network itself as a bridge to take interface evaluation to a broad range of users in their natural work settings. The over-arching goal of this work is to develop and evaluate a cost-effective remote usability evaluation method for real-world applications used by real users doing real tasks in real work environments. This thesis reports the development of such a method, and the results of a study to:

  • investigate feasibility and effectiveness of involving users with to identify and report critical incidents in usage,
  • investigate feasibility and effectiveness of transforming remotely-gathered critical incidents into usability problem descriptions, and
  • gain insight into various parameters associated with the method.

Master of Science
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Macrae, Carl. "Assuring organizational risk resilience : assessing, managing and learning from flight safety incident reports." Thesis, University of East Anglia, 2005. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.427089.

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Quader, Mithila, and Sara Lidén. "An approach to manage corporate scandals : Legitimizing negative incidents in CSR-reports." Thesis, Karlstads universitet, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-68550.

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Background: The relationship between CSR-reports and legitimacy has been on-going from the very beginning that businesses started to report on sustainability related issues. Prior research suggest that businesses can enhance their competitive edge by maintaining legitimacy through CSR-reports. Therefore, prior research also suggests that businesses can alter how information is disclosed in CSR-reports in order to maintain or enhance their legitimacy. This has caused a tendency amongst businesses to create overly positive and unbalanced reports, but what happens when the lack of negative information backfires? Purpose: The purpose of the paper is to examine how negative information is disclosed before a corporate scandal, and which legitimization strategies are applied to communicate in CSR-reports to restore legitimacy after facing a corporate scandal. Method: The paper has applied a thematic analysis to analyze unobtrusive data gathered from CSR-disclosures from ten companies and media outlets who have reported on the scandal, using a qualitative approach.      Findings: Three key findings were made. CSR-reports are used as a legitimacy tool to disclose negative information. The paper identifies continuous signs of companies shifting focus to maintain or restore legitimacy through the use of strengthened language, the addition of a time-aspect or a new perspective. This finding has led to the last key finding and conclusion of this paper; that an additional strategy can be identified in a majority of the companies – the strategy of shifting focus. Keywords: Legitimacy, CSR-reports, corporate scandals, negative incidents
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Wise, Patrick E. "Emergency Management Plan Training in Higher Education: Faculty Report of Preparedness for Active-Shooter Incidents." University of Toledo / OhioLINK, 2021. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1619435848315978.

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Tulechki, Nikola. "Natural language processing of incident and accident reports : application to risk management in civil aviation." Thesis, Toulouse 2, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015TOU20035/document.

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Cette thèse décrit les applications du traitement automatique des langues (TAL) à la gestion des risques industriels. Elle se concentre sur le domaine de l'aviation civile, où le retour d'expérience (REX) génère de grandes quantités de données, sous la forme de rapports d'accidents et d'incidents. Nous commençons par faire un panorama des différentes types de données générées dans ce secteur d'activité. Nous analysons les documents, comment ils sont produits, collectés, stockés et organisés ainsi que leurs utilisations. Nous montrons que le paradigme actuel de stockage et d’organisation est mal adapté à l’utilisation réelle de ces documents et identifions des domaines problématiques ou les technologies du langage constituent une partie de la solution. Répondant précisément aux besoins d'experts en sécurité, deux solutions initiales sont implémentées : la catégorisation automatique de documents afin d'aider le codage des rapports dans des taxonomies préexistantes et un outil pour l'exploration de collections de rapports, basé sur la similarité textuelle. En nous basant sur des observations de l'usage de ces outils et sur les retours de leurs utilisateurs, nous proposons différentes méthodes d'analyse des textes issus du REX et discutons des manières dont le TAL peut être appliqué dans le cadre de la gestion de la sécurité dans un secteur à haut risque. En déployant et évaluant certaines solutions, nous montrons que même des aspects subtils liés à la variation et à la multidimensionnalité du langage peuvent être traités en pratique afin de gérer la surabondance de données REX textuelles de manière ascendante
This thesis describes the applications of natural language processing (NLP) to industrial risk management. We focus on the domain of civil aviation, where incident reporting and accident investigations produce vast amounts of information, mostly in the form of textual accounts of abnormal events, and where efficient access to the information contained in the reports is required. We start by drawing a panorama of the different types of data produced in this particular domain. We analyse the documents themselves, how they are stored and organised as well as how they are used within the community. We show that the current storage and organisation paradigms are not well adapted to the data analysis requirements, and we identify the problematic areas, for which NLP technologies are part of the solution. Specifically addressing the needs of aviation safety professionals, two initial solutions are implemented: automatic classification for assisting in the coding of reports within existing taxonomies and a system based on textual similarity for exploring collections of reports. Based on the observation of real-world tool usage and on user feedback, we propose different methods and approaches for processing incident and accident reports and comprehensively discuss how NLP can be applied within the safety information processing framework of a high-risk sector. By deploying and evaluating certain approaches, we show how elusive aspects related to the variability and multidimensionality of language can be addressed in a practical manner and we propose bottom-up methods for managing the overabundance of textual feedback data
Тoзи реферат описва приложението на автоматичната обработка на естествен език (ОЕЕ) в контекста на управлението на риска в гражданското въздухоплаване. В тази област докладването на инциденти и разследването на произшествия генерират голямо количество информация, главно под формата на текстови описания на необичайни събития. На първо време описваме раличните типове (текстови) данни, които секторът произвежда. Анализираме самите документи, методите за съхраняването им, как са организирани, както и техните употреби от екперти по сигурността. Показваме, че съвремените парадигми за съхраняване и организация не са добре приспособени към реалната употреба на този тип данни и установяваме проблемните зони, в които ОЕЕ е част от решението. Две приложения, отговарящи прецизно на нуждите на експерти по авиационна сигурност, са имплементирани: автоматична класификация на доклади за инциденти и система за проучване на на колекции, основаваща се върху текстовото сходство. Въз основа на наблюдения на реалната употреба на приложенията, предлагаме няколко метода за обработка на доклади за инциденти и произшествия и обсъждаме в дълбочина как ОЕЕ може да бъде проложено на различни нива в информационнo-обработващите структури на един високорисков сектор. Оценявайки методите показваме, че трудностите свързани с многоизмерността и изменимостта на човешкия език могат да бъдат ефективно адресирани и предлагаме надеждни възходящи методи за справяне със свръхизобилието на доклади за инциденти в текстови формат
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Books on the topic "Report incident"

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The incident report. Toronto: Pedlar Press, 2009.

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Baillie, Martha. The incident report. Toronto: Pedlar Press, 2009.

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Cheju 4.3 Sakŏn Chinsang Kyumyŏng mit Hŭisaengja Myŏngye Hoebok Wiwŏnhoe, ed. The Jeju 4.3 incident investigation report. Jeju-si: Jeju 4.3 Peace Foundation, 2014.

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The Jeju April 3 incident investigation report. Jeju-si: National Committee for Investigation of the Truth about the Jeju April 3 Incident, 2013.

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No Gun Ri Incident victim review report. Seoul: Committee for the Review and Restoration of Honor for the No Gun Ri Victims, 2009.

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Union Carbide Corporation. Bhopal Methyl Isocyanate IncidentInvestigation Team. Bhopal Methyl Isocyanate Incident Investigation Team report. Danbury, Conn: Union Carbide Corporation, 1985.

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Martin, Peter T. Incident detection algorithm evaluation: Draft final report. Salt Lake City, Utah: Utah Dept. of Transportation, Research Division, 2001.

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Shepard, Frank D. Incident management in Virginia: A state of the practice report : final report. Charlottesville, Va: Virginia Transportation Research Council, 1991.

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United States. Dept. of Energy. Office of Audit Services. Audit report: The department's cyber security incident management capability. Washington, DC: Office of Inspector General, Dept. of Energy, 2008.

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Staff, Journals for All. Daily Incident Report: Incident Log. Independently Published, 2017.

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Book chapters on the topic "Report incident"

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Steinwider, Johann, Karl Buchgraber, Johann Gasteiner, Thomas Guggenberger, Hans-Peter Hutter, Michael Kundi, Daniela Mihats, et al. "Case report: hexachlorobenzene incident in Austria." In Chemical hazards in foods of animal origin, 479–501. The Netherlands: Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/978-90-8686-877-3_19.

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Müller-Leonhardt, A. "Stressbearbeitung nach beruflichen kritischen Ereignissen mittels Critical Incident Stress Management (CISM)." In Fehlzeiten-Report 2017, 87–92. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-54632-1_8.

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Wang, Luozhong. "Research on the Environmental Information Disclosure System in Sudden Environmental Pollution Incidents: Taking Zijin Mining Pollution Incident as an Example." In Current Chinese Economic Report Series, 449–59. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-31597-8_19.

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Carthy, Joe, David C. Wilson, Ruichao Wang, John Dunnion, and Anne Drummond. "Using T-Ret System to Improve Incident Report Retrieval." In Computational Linguistics and Intelligent Text Processing, 468–71. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-24630-5_57.

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Lautenschlager, Florian, and Marcus Ciolkowski. "Making Runtime Data Useful for Incident Diagnosis: An Experience Report." In Product-Focused Software Process Improvement, 422–30. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-03673-7_33.

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Shimada, Tatsuya, and Yusaku Okada. "A Study on the Quality of Information in Potential Incident Report." In Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, 229–39. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94589-7_23.

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Sánchez, Manuel, and Manuel Blanco. "Control of Incident Power at the Receiver." In The IEA/SSPS Solar Thermal Power Plants — Facts and Figures— Final Report of the International Test and Evaluation Team (ITET), 70. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-82684-9_29.

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Chua, Henry, and Vincent Matthew Roble. "Intraoperative Splenic Injuries." In Mastering Endo-Laparoscopic and Thoracoscopic Surgery, 375–77. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-3755-2_54.

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AbstractIntraoperative splenic injuries can occur in any abdominal surgical procedure. Reports range from vascular surgeons performing abdominal aortic aneurysm repairs to thoracic surgeons performing Nissen fundoplication to urologists performing radical nephrectomies [1]. Injury to the spleen during laparoscopic urological surgery has a reported incidence of 0.25% [2]. The reported incidence of splenic injury resulting in splenectomy during colonic surgery is 1.2–8%. The highest percentage of all incidental splenectomies are due to colonic surgeries, primarily to a large number of these operations and the close proximity between the colonic splenic flexure and the spleen [3]. Injuries to the spleen during laparoscopic adrenalectomy may be either access-related or caused by powerful retraction and handling of the organ [4].
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Franke, Ulrik, Johan Turell, and Ivar Johansson. "The Cost of Incidents in Essential Services—Data from Swedish NIS Reporting." In Critical Information Infrastructures Security, 116–29. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-93200-8_7.

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AbstractThe NIS Directive aims to increase the overall level of cyber security in the EU and establishes a mandatory reporting regime for operators of essential services and digital service providers. While this reporting has attracted much attention, both in society at large and in the scientific community, the non-public nature of reports has led to a lack of empirically based research. This paper uses the unique set of all the mandatory NIS reports in Sweden in 2020 to shed light on incident costs. The costs reported exhibit large variability and skewed distributions, where a single or a few higher values push the average upwards. Numerical values are in the range of tens to hundreds of kSEK per incident. The most common incident causes are malfunctions and mistakes, whereas attacks are rare. No operators funded their incident costs using loans or insurance. Even though the reporting is mandated by law, operator cost estimates are incomplete and sometimes difficult to interpret, calling for additional assistance and training of operators to make the data more useful.
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Blicq, Ron S., and Lisa A. Moretto. "Incident, Field Trip, and Inspection Reports." In Writing Reports to Get Results, 17–37. New York, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119134626.ch3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Report incident"

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Tehrani, Pouyan Fotouhi, Stefan Pfennigschmidt, Ulrich Kriegel, Andreas Billig, Frank Fuchs-Kittowski, and Ulrich Meissen. "Multidimensional report analysis in urban incident management." In 2017 International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies for Disaster Management (ICT-DM). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ict-dm.2017.8275689.

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Danneman, Nathan, and Robert Gove. "Tuning Automatic Summarization for Incident Report Visualization." In 2022 IEEE 15th Pacific Visualization Symposium (PacificVis). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/pacificvis53943.2022.00031.

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Twilhaar, Gerrit Dirk Nijen, and Wouter de Gier. "MISS: Report an Incident using a Mobile Phone." In SPE International Conference on Health, Safety, and Environment in Oil and Gas Exploration and Production. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/111597-ms.

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Lif, Patrik, Stefan Varga, Mikael Wedlin, David Lindahl, and Mats Persson. "Evaluation of Information Elements in a Cyber Incident Report." In 2020 IEEE European Symposium on Security and Privacy Workshops (EuroS&PW). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/eurospw51379.2020.00012.

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Byon, Sungwon, Eunjung Kwon, Eui-Suk Jung, and Yong-Tae Lee. "An Analysis of Incident Report Data for Emergence Dispatch." In 2021 International Conference on Information and Communication Technology Convergence (ICTC). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ictc52510.2021.9620920.

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Yamashita, Takanori, Naoki Nakashima, and Sachio Hirokawa. "Classification and Feature Extraction for Text-based Drug Incident Report." In ICBCB 2018: 2018 6th International Conference on Bioinformatics and Computational Biology. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3194480.3194499.

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Solis, Adriano O., Jenaro Nosedal-Sánchez, Ali Asgary, Francesco Longo, Deryn Rizzi, Antonio Briga, Antonella Castagna, and Beatrice Zaccaro. "Agent-based simulation of a fire department’s response to emergency incidents: an updated model." In THE 9TH INTERNATIONAL DEFENCE AND HOMELAND SECURITY SIMULATION WORKSHOP. CAL-TEK srl, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.46354/i3m.2019.dhss.007.

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A modelling and simulation (M&S) approach was earlier developed, following statistical analysis of the emergency incident database of the Vaughan Fire & Rescue Service covering eight years of consecutive incident records from January 2009 to December 2016. The M&S framework, which could potentially be replicated for fire departments across Canada, involved two different simulation models running on separate platforms: (i) an Incident Generation Engine, which simulates the ‘arrival’ of emergency incidents, and (ii) a Response Simulation Model. The current report covers only an update of the Response Simulation Model, an agent-based model developed using AnyLogic. Two issues associated with the earlier Response Simulation Model have specifically been addressed and resolved by the updated model. We report on findings from our simulation experiments based on the updated model.
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Lou, Jian-Guang, Qingwei Lin, Rui Ding, Qiang Fu, Dongmei Zhang, and Tao Xie. "Software analytics for incident management of online services: An experience report." In 2013 IEEE/ACM 28th International Conference on Automated Software Engineering (ASE). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ase.2013.6693105.

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Laurena, Luis Rafael, John Wendell Maranan, Marjun Gil Pinza, and Eric Blancaflor. "AidPack: A Web-Based Report Management System for Community Incident Response." In ICEEG 2022: 2022 6th International Conference on E-Commerce, E-Business and E-Government. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3537693.3537746.

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Chen, Jenny Jing, Dan Williams, Keith Leewis, and Michael Barnum. "Long Term (1970 to 2015) Trending of the Nine Prescriptive Pipeline Threats." In 2016 11th International Pipeline Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ipc2016-64503.

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Since the 1970s, the United States Department of Transportation (USDOT) Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) has collected and published pipeline failure incident data. Operators are required to report pipeline incidents and provide the apparent cause of failures. PHMSA and ASME (B31.8S for gas and B31.4 for liquids) identify and group these failures into nine broad categories and sub-classify them into three clusters by their time-based behavior. Technical advancements in pipe manufacturing, fabrication, construction, operation, inspection, monitoring, maintenance, rehabilitation and regulation have resulted in a decrease in incidents for many of these failure causes. This paper presents a statistical trending analysis of the failure incidents for each of the nine threats. The multi-year trending of these incident metrics over the last 40+ years will be demonstrated.
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Reports on the topic "Report incident"

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Gregg, D. W., A. Buerer, and S. Leeds. Incident analysis report. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/215836.

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Inacio, C., and D. Miyamoto. Management Incident Lightweight Exchange (MILE) Implementation Report. RFC Editor, May 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc8134.

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Austin, B. A. Plutonium Reclamation Facility incident response project progress report. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), November 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/362354.

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Enis, E. Incident investigation team report: K-reactor D20 spill. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/7031556.

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Enis, E. Incident investigation team report: K-reactor D20 spill. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/10172797.

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Bleser E. and P. Ingrassia. Report on Protons Incident on Booster Dump in 1994. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1132414.

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Beach, D., S. Carr, B. Anderson, J. Lewis, J. Merrigan, J. Richards, T. Smith, and R. Scott. Incident Analysis Report: B696 MOVER Event, August 19, 2004. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), November 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/15011399.

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Beach, D., S. Carr, B. Anderson, J. Lewis, J. Merrigan, J. Richards, T. Smith, and R. Scott. Incident Analysis Report: B696 MOVER Event, August 19, 2004. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), April 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/15016325.

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Bleser E. and P. Ingrassia. Interim Report on Protons Incident on Booster Dump in 1995. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1132415.

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McKinnon, Mark B., and Daniel Madrzykowski. Four Firefighters Burned in Residential House Fire - Georgia. UL's Fire Safety Research Institute, June 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54206/102376/gekk4148.

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On September 3, 2018, two career Fire Lieutenants and two career Firefighters suffered burn injuries as a result of a residential structure fire. On September 10, 2018, personnel representing several other fire departments in the area, including a member of the Fire Safety Research Institute (FSRI) Advisory Board visited the fire scene to document the incident and collect material samples from the structure. The narrative and analysis presented in this report rely on the photographs and evidence collected on September 10, 2018, dispatch transcript [5] and videos recorded at the time of the incident, and interviews conducted by a local investigator between September 3, 2018 and September 7, 2018 with fire service personnel involved in the incident and the resident of the structure [6]. The LaGrange Fire Department invited FSRI to study this incident as part of FSRI’s Near-Miss Project which is supported by a DHS/FEMA Assistance to Firefighters Grant. The goal of this project is to enhance the safety and situational awareness of the fire service by applying fire dynamics research results to near-miss or line of duty injury fire incidents. By identifying factors that contributed to the incident, perhaps future incidents may be prevented. FSRI’s analysis of this incident will apply research results and utilize fire research tools, such as computer fire models, to examine key fire phenomena and tactical outcomes. This report will explain the incident, what occurred, why it occurred, and what can be done differently in the future to result in a more favorable outcome
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