Artigo Revisado por pares

Integrating Statistical Process Control and Engineering Process Control

1994; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 26; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/00224065.1994.11979508

ISSN

2575-6230

Autores

Douglas C. Montgomery, J. Bert Keats, George C. Runger, William S. Messina,

Tópico(s)

Quality and Safety in Healthcare

Resumo

Statistical process control (SPC) is traditionally applied to processes that vary about a fixed mean, and where successive observations are viewed as statistically independent. Engineering process control (EPC) is usually applied to processes in which successive observations are related over time, and where the mean drifts dynamically. Thus, EPC seeks to minimize variability by transferring it from the output variable to a related process input (controllable) variable, while SPC seeks to reduce variability by detecting and eliminating assignable causes of variation. This paper shows through simulation that when using EPC it is always better to have an SPC system in place that monitors and acts properly on the root cause of the assignable change.

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