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by Carl S. Carlson 2 Comments

FMEA Q & A – Medical Devices

FMEA Q & A – Medical Devices

3 Medical Device Questions

FMEA Q & A

In these series of questions, a reader asks about whether system FMEAs in the medical device industry should include human interactions, and the difference between system and application FMEAs.

“The art of proposing a question must be held of higher value than solving it.”  Georg Cantor

Reader’s Questions

We have a medical device system consisting of the medical equipment, the user and the patient. Here are my questions.

  1. Should the user and patient be part of this system?
  2. How would we perform an application or system FMEA on this?
  3. Is an application and system FMEA the same thing?

Answer to first question: Should the user and patient be part of this system?

Let me begin my answer with the definition and scope of System FMEA, excerpted from my book, Effective FMEAs:

System FMEA is the highest-level analysis of an entire system, made up of various subsystems. The focus is on system-related deficiencies, including system safety, system integration, interfaces or interactions between subsystems or with other systems, interactions with the surrounding environment, human interaction, service, and other issues that could cause the overall system not to work as intended. In System FMEA, the focus is on functions and relationships that are unique to the system as a whole (i.e., do not exist at lower levels). The System level FMEA includes failure modes associated with interfaces and interactions in addition to considering single-point failures (where a single component failure can result in complete failure of the entire system). Some practitioners separate out human interaction and service into their own respective FMEAs.

As you can see from this description of System FMEA, the scope is not set in stone. It is up to the FMEA team (and supporting management) to determine the exact scope of individual FMEAs. In answer to your question # 1, there are two approaches that practitioners use.

One approach is to do two different FMEAs: a System FMEA which includes just the device system itself and not the interactions/interfaces with users and patients, and a separate Human Factors (or Application) FMEA, which covers only the interactions/interfaces between the system and the users and patients.

The second approach is to do a more comprehensive System FMEA, which includes within its scope the interactions/interfaces with users and patients in addition to device system. International standards or company policy may dictate which approach you are required to use, so it is important to familiarize yourself with appropriate standards and policy.

Regardless of which approach you use, be sure to make the scope visible through the use of a properly done FMEA Block Diagram. This will show clearly the scope of your FMEA, including interfaces with humans.

Answer to second question: How would we perform an Application or System FMEA on this?

A thorough answer to this question will go beyond the scope of this forum. I dedicate three entire chapters in my book to the preparation, procedure, and implementation of all different types of FMEAs, including System FMEA. Having said that let me provide a few tips to get you started.

Let’s assume you know how to prepare and conduct an FMEA and want to know what is different about a System FMEA (including the interactions with users and patients). One of the first considerations is whether to include the interfaces with humans in the system hierarchy (as you have done), or to include the human interfaces as interface functions in the list of primary functions at the system level. I typically use the latter, but it can be done either way.

The most important thing is to include system interactions with humans somewhere, so they do not get missed in your FMEAs. If you include the interface between users/patients and the medical device in the system hierarchy, then it should be so described in the system hierarchy as “user-to-system interface” and “patient-to-system interface”, rather than merely “user(s)” and “patient(s).” If you include the user/patient interface to system as interface functions (in the FMEA function column, make sure they are properly described, including the standard of performance for each function. When including interfaces as functions, I like to state “Interface A – B” followed by the verbiage for the function.

It is also important to do an FMEA Block Diagram that clearly shows the scope of your FMEA, and shows the 4 types of interfaces (physical connection, material exchange, energy transfer and/or data exchange). One other point is to include in your System FMEA the interfaces between the various subsystems, as these can generate a significant percentage of the failure modes.

You will have to review your risk ranking scales to be sure they apply adequately to System FMEAs, Application FMEAs (if you do them separately), and Design FMEAs (typically done at the subsystem or component level).

Answer to third question: Is an application and system FMEA the same thing?

I think we covered this above. Many medical device companies separate System FMEA (scope: the device system) and Application (or Human Factors) FMEA (scope: interfaces between device system and humans). As I have said above, you can do these separately, or combine them into one more comprehensive System FMEA. The key is to show clearly the scope of your FMEA, and to include all of the subsystem-to-subsystem interfaces, as well as the interfaces between users/patients and the device system.

Next article

The FMEA Definitions and Concepts Series will begin with the next article, “Understanding FMEA Functions: Essential Elements.” By my own observations, more than half of FMEA practitioners miss a key element when defining FMEA functions. This article discusses how to properly describe FMEA functions.

Filed Under: Articles, Inside FMEA, on Tools & Techniques

About Carl S. Carlson

Carl S. Carlson is a consultant and instructor in the areas of FMEA, reliability program planning and other reliability engineering disciplines, supporting over one hundred clients from a wide cross-section of industries. He has 35 years of experience in reliability testing, engineering, and management positions, including senior consultant with ReliaSoft Corporation, and senior manager for the Advanced Reliability Group at General Motors.

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Comments

  1. Carl Green says

    August 18, 2020 at 4:41 PM

    It’s interesting to learn that a system FMEA is the highest-level analysis for a system that is related to medical devices. My brother is wanting to get into the medical device industry and he was wanting to learn more about the analysis part of systems. I’ll be sure to tell him to research more about FMEA.

    Reply
    • Carl Carlson says

      August 19, 2020 at 4:09 AM

      Hello Carl.
      Glad to hear your brother wants to learn about analysis of medical devices.
      Just to clarify, System FMEA can apply to all types of systems, from just about any industry. For sure, it applies very well to medical devices.
      One suggestion is to refer your brother to this link, which lists the entire set of “Inside FMEA” articles. https://lucas-accendo-site-speed.sprod01.rmkr.net/inside-fmea-index-articles/
      Thanks.
      Carl

      Reply

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Articles by Carl Carlson
in the Inside FMEA series

[popup type="" link_text="Logo Info" ]

Information about FMEA Icon

Inside FMEA can be visually represented by a large tree, with roots, a solid trunk, branches, and leaves.

- The roots of the tree represent the philosophy and guiding principles for effective FMEAs.
- The solid trunk of the tree represents the fundamentals for all FMEAs.
- The branches represent the various FMEA applications.
- The leaves represent the valuable outcomes of FMEAs.
- This is intended to convey that each of the various FMEA applications have the same fundamentals and philosophical roots.

 

For example, the roots of the tree can represent following philosophy and guiding principles for effective FMEAs, such as:

1. Correct procedure         2. Lessons learned
3. Trained team                 4. Focus on prevention
5. Integrated with DFR    6. Skilled facilitation
7. Management support

The tree trunk represents the fundamentals of FMEA. All types of FMEA share common fundamentals, and these are essential to successful FMEA applications.

The tree branches can include the different types of FMEAs, including:

1. System FMEA         2. Design FMEA
3. Process FMEA        4. DRBFM
5. Hazard Analysis     6. RCM or Maintenance FMEA
7. Software FMEA      8. Other types of FMEA

The leaves of the tree branches represent individual FMEA projects, with a wide variety of FMEA scopes and results. [/popup]

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