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Safety Performance Factor

International Journal of Occupational Safety and Ergonomics, 2008
Workplace safety performance is computed using frequency rate (FR) and severity rate (SR). Only work time lost due to occupational incidents that need to be reported is counted. FR and SR are the 2 most important safety performance indicators that are applied universally; however, calculations differ from country to country.
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Safety of coagulation factor concentrates

Haemophilia, 1998
Summary. Many of the adverse effects of the early crude plasma‐derived concentrates were ameliorated by increasing their purity. Ironically, this strategy may have increased the risks of inhibitor formation and pathogen transmission due to the addition of processing steps which can alter the immunogenicity of clotting factors and the use of very large ...
C. A. Lee   +5 more
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Safety Factors

The Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society, 1956
Three of the primary considerations involved in the design of an aeroplane are safety, weight and serviceaability. The structure weight being a major item in the design which can influence its efficiency as a flying machine, the considerations of safety and serviceability have always to be studied with respect to their effect on the weight of the ...
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Generalizing the safety factor approach

Reliability Engineering & System Safety, 2006
Safety factors (uncertainty factors) are used to avoid failure in a wide variety of practices and disciplines, in particular engineering design and toxicology.
Jonas Clausen   +2 more
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Safety factor at the neuromuscular junction

Progress in Neurobiology, 2001
Reliable transmission of activity from nerve to muscle is necessary for the normal function of the body. The term 'safety factor' refers to the ability of neuromuscular transmission to remain effective under various physiological conditions and stresses.
S J, Wood, C R, Slater
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Safety factors in bone strength

Calcified Tissue International, 1993
Functional in vivo strain data are examined in relation to bone material properties in an attempt to evaluate the relative importance of osteoporotic bone loss versus fatigue damage accumulation as factors underlying clinical bone fragility. Specifically, does the skeleton have a sufficiently large safety factor (ratio of bone failure strain to maximum
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