Root Cause & Corrective Action Corrective Action (RCCA) (RCCA)
Root Cause & Corrective Action Corrective Action (RCCA) (RCCA)
Root Cause & Corrective Action Corrective Action (RCCA) (RCCA)
ROOT CAUSE
&
CORRECTIVE ACTION
(RCCA)
1
Root Cause Analysis and Corrective
Action is a Process For:
Finding the true cause(s) of events
Identifying and Implementing corrective
actions
Assessing
A i the
th effectiveness
ff ti off corrective
ti
actions
Preventing recurrence of the events
2
Why Root Cause Analysis ?
3
A Cause ...
4
Th Critical
The C iti l Fi
Five
Direct Cause: The cause that directly resulted in the event.
(The first cause in the chain
chain.))
Contributing Cause: The cause(s) that contributed to an event but, by itself, would
not have caused the event. (The causes after the direct cause.)
Root Cause: The fundamental reason for an event, which if corrected, would
prevent recurrence. ((The last cause in the chain.))
p
Cop-out,
Cop out Operator
Operator error
error . Why do people not
comply?
Improper instructions
Improper tools
Improper training
6
Don't Limit the Search!
7
Why Why Why Why Why
(Determining Cause)
Most problems, even the most serious or complex, can be
handled by using asking Why Why Why Why Why.
Why
8
Just Keep Asking
Why did it happen?
PROBLEM: Didn't
Didn t get to work on time.
time Why?
(DIRECT) CAUSE: Car wouldn't start Why?
(CONTRIBUTING) CAUSE: Battery was dead. Why?
(CONTRIBUTING) CAUSE: Dome light on all night. Why?
9
Causes
Direct Cause: The cause that directly resulted in an event. (The
first cause in the chain.)
This is the answer to your first question (your problem statement).
10
Let's
' Expand on a Problem
Cause & Effect
Received ticket for safety violation.
Car exhaust too loud.
Muffler knocked loose from tail pipe.
pp
Daughter hit pot hole.
Pot holes in road.
Winters damaged roads
roads.
Congress won't approve extra
money for better roads.
Congress doesn't have extra money.
Congress spent money on pork barrels.
Too many y lawyers
y in Congress.
g
Solution? Drive car in Sweden where there are fewer lawyers.
11
CORRECTIVE ACTION:
12
Three Types of Corrective Action
Specific
Preventive
Systemic
13
SPECIFIC CORRECTIVE ACTION
Action(s) taken to correct the direct cause.
((Corrects or improves
p the condition noted
in the event, by changing the direct cause,
or the direct cause and the effect.)
Used
U d to correct the
h Di
Direct C
Cause
14
PREVENTIVE CORRECTIVE
.
ACTION
16
Specific Action Test
17
Preventive Action Test
18
Implementation Timeline
Specific
p Action / Containment
Must prevent the problem from occurring again, but must do so immediately.
This may require shipment to shipment monitoring!
Preventive Action
Must be timed reasonably so as to not affect the ability to monitor on an
ongoing basis. Consider the ability to do so and strain on resources.
Systemic
May be a longer term fix, but allowing this to go too far may enable recurrence
if Preventive is not robust.
Example: REWRITING JOB DESCRIPTION TO TRAIN NEW EMPLOYEES
AND DEVELOP PROCEDURES TO DO SO!
19
Follow - Up
20
EFFECTIVENESS MEASUREMENTS
The criteria
Th it i usedd tto evaluate
l t if th
the
corrective actions achieved the desired
outcome.
21
Did Corrective
C ti A Actions
ti W
Work?
k?
22
8D / RCCA
Flow Chart
Root Cause Analysis
and Corrective Action
ACT ON FACT !
The process wont
workk without
ith t it !
23
CASE STUDY
EXAMPLE
AN ACTUAL
CAR
24
THE CAR
FINDING: .380 Maximum center diameter checks .393
0.13 Oversize
25
y and Corrective
Root Cause Analysis
Action is a Process For:
Finding the true cause(s) of events
27
RESPONSESCAUSE:
28
y and Corrective
Root Cause Analysis
Action is a Process For:
Finding the true cause(s) of events
29
CASE STUDY CONTRIBUTING CAUSE: N.A.
RESPONSES: ROOT CAUSE: N
N.A.
A
CONTRIBUTING CAUSE: N.A. << REVIEWER COMMENT: ARE
YOU SURE? ASK YOURSELF: WHY DID THE CONTRIBUTING
CAUSE HAPPEN. CENTER DRILL CUT OVERSIZE (WHY?).
MACHINE DID NOT HOLD TOLERANCE (WHY?). OPERATOR
DID NOT CATCH THIS WHEN INSPECTING PART (WHY?)
ROOT CAUSE: N.A. << REVIEWER COMMENT: WHAT FAILED
IN THE OVERALL QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM THAT
CAUSED THE OVERALL FAILURE THAT MIGHT RESULT IN A
FUTURE FAILURE OF THE SAME TYPE???
30
CASE STUDY RESPONSESCORRECTIVE ACTIONS:
31
y and Corrective
Root Cause Analysis
Action is a Process For:
Identifying and Implementing corrective actions
33
Corrected Causes
AFTER UTILIZING THE 8D PROCESS
Finding
g
.380 Maximum center diameter checks .393 - .013 Oversize
Direct Cause
Manual lathe not capable of holding tolerance due to wear and/or poor maintenance of
machine
Contributing Cause(s)
Tooling used, operator training, not monitoring on-going parts, processing, tap relief,
previous
i center
t lap
l operation,
ti operator
t workmanship,
k hi material,
t i l llack
k off kknowledge
l d iin
regards to machine capabilities, poor machine maintenance.
Root Cause
Process engineering processed job to run manually in equipment they had no information
on in regards to capability, equipment not presently capable of holding tolerance.
34
C
Corrected
t d ACTIONS
AFTER UTILIZING THE 8D PROCESS
Specific Action / Containment
Train operator in use of chamfer gage, run other product for this
operation elsewhere until the machine capability can be addressed,
review all like product in system, determine if Customer is in receipt of
any suspect product, recall product if necessary.
Preventive Action
Processing reviewed by Supervisor, Engineering and Quality
Assurance. Determination made based on review of all inputs,
machine,, inspection
p technique,
q , processing,
p g, material,, tooling
g that
moving this operation to the NC machining center at this time from the
manual lathe
Systemic Action
Process Change Request generated by Engineering to move
operation 90 to NC machine in accordance with established PCR
procedure and related forms. Equipment needs review (process to
determine present capability and what its use will be in the future.
Operators and process engineers need to be made aware of capability
i f
information
ti ffor ffuture
t reference.
f
35
Definitions
CAR: Corrective Action Request
Contributing Cause(s): The cause(s) that contributed to an event but, by itself, would not have
caused the event. (line causes after the direct cause.)
Corrective Action: A set of planned activities (actions) implemented for the sole purpose of
permanently resolving a problem.
Data Analysis: Examination of the information collected before, during, and after the event to
identify the causal factors, impact of the event, and the causes (root, direct, and
contributing).
Di t Cause:
Direct C The
Th cause that
th t directly
di tl resulted
lt d in
i th
the event.
t (line
(li first
fi t cause in
i the
th chain.)
h i )
Effectiveness Measurements: The criteria used to evaluate if the corrective actions have
achieved the desired outcome.
Event: All inclusive term for any of the following: finding, occurrence, deficiency, or incident.
Follow Up: A review to determine if the corrective actions have been effective.
N t lT
Natural Team: A group off people
l hhaving
i vested
t d ownership
hi off th
the problem
bl tto be
b solved.
l d
36
Definitions
Plant-wide Corrective Action: The activities involved in performing corrective actions that expand
beyond the boundaries of the natural team (area, department, jurisdiction, or facilities).
Preventive Corrective Action: Action (s) taken that prevent recurrence of the condition noted in the
event. (Preventive actions must directly address the root and contributing causes to be
effective.)
Qualified Team: The natural team, including other individuals, who can provide necessary
resources to understand the problem, or can help in the root cause analysis and corrective
action process.
Root Cause Analysis and Corrective Action Process: An effective tool for finding the true or actual
cause of events, facilitating effective corrective action and preventing their recurrence.
Specific Corrective Action: Action (s) taken to correct or improve the condition noted in the event by
changing the direct cause or the direct cause and the effect.
37