[SystemSafety] Agile methods
Nancy Leveson
leveson.nancy8 at gmail.com
Mon Sep 2 19:34:04 CEST 2013
Unfortunately, the regulatory requirements for medical device software are
very weak. I gave a talk at a meeting of radiation physicists about what
they needed to do to create safer radiation therapy devices. The
manufacturers at the meeting told me that the FDA only requires a FMEA and
that is all they were going to do until the requirements were changed. They
suggested I attend the standards committee meetings and get them changed
(yeah, sure :-)). I should say that I do know at least one device
manufacturer who does not just have a "compliance culture" but actually
does what is necessary to ensure that their devices are safe, even if it is
not required. I doubt such manufacturers, however, are in the majority.
I don't think the FDA has any specific requirements for developing software
(although I could be wrong -- someone should correct me if I am wrong).
There is a loophole in the requirements that if a "substantially similar
device" was previously approved, then the approval process for the new
device is very abbreviated. That made sense for a purely physical device,
like a stent, but not for ones that contain software that is at the least
changed when a new version is put on the market and often contains software
that is totally new.
Nancy
On Mon, Sep 2, 2013 at 1:20 PM, Steve Tockey <Steve.Tockey at construx.com>wrote:
>
> Nancy,
> I didn't read the report cover-to-cover yet, I pretty much skimmed it. It
> doesn't appear to show any kind of analysis of recalls or errors at all.
> It's more of, "this is what regulatory requirements say on topic A, here's
> what agile says on that same topic, this should be/is a reasonable way to
> align them".
>
> On the other hand, I would't expect the AAMI report to really do that
> anyway. If anything, the regulatory requirements should be based on some
> kind of scientific analysis of errors & recalls. The onus should be on the
> compliance requirements to demonstrate that those requirements actually
> make a reasonable difference in the safety of the device.
>
>
> -- steve
>
>
>
> From: Nancy Leveson <leveson.nancy8 at gmail.com>
> Date: Monday, September 2, 2013 10:07 AM
> To: Steve Tockey <Steve.Tockey at construx.com>
> Cc: René Senden <rene.senden at gmail.com>, M Mencke <menckem at gmail.com>, "
> systemsafety at techfak.uni-bielefeld.de" <
> systemsafety at techfak.uni-bielefeld.de>
>
> Subject: Re: [SystemSafety] Agile methods
>
> Does the AAMI report do any scientific analysis of the errors or
> recalls involved in the medical device software produced by Agile methods?
> Or is it simple "we used it"?
>
> Given the sad state of medical device software, it does not seem that
> simply using Agile methods proves anything. Homa Alenzadeh, a grad
> student at UIUC, has looked at medical device recalls. The following is
> from an abstract she wrote for a talk she gave: "Medical device incidents
> are one of the leading causes of serious injury and death in the United
> States. Between years 2006 and 2011, 5,294 recalls and approximately 1.2
> million adverse events of medical devices were reported to the US Food
> and Drug Administration (FDA). Almost 23 percent of these recalls were
> due to computer-related failures, of which approximately 94 percent
> presented medium to high risk of severe health consequences (such as
> serious injury or death) to patients. '
>
> If my arithmetic is correct (1,200,000*.23 and then divide by 5 then
> multiply by .94), it appears from Homa's data that there are 51,888
> reported potentially serious incidents to the FDA regarding software each
> year. That is 144 every day. And many incidents are not reported (the
> reporting rules are pretty sketchy) and that is only in the U.S.
>
> The simple fact that mdedical device manufacturers have used Agile
> methods does not prove anything about their efficacy for safety-critical
> systems given the sad state of safety in that industry.
>
> Nncy
>
>
> On Mon, Sep 2, 2013 at 12:40 PM, Steve Tockey <Steve.Tockey at construx.com>wrote:
>
>> All,
>> I have personal experience using Agile, and personal experience doing
>> safety-critical development (DO-178B), but not personal experience doing
>> agile development for a safety critical system. Instead of being polarizing
>> and claiming "it can't be done", I'll simply say that I believe that it is
>> possible to do it—it could just end up being very costly to do so. The
>> worst case would be developing the code for the system in an truly agile
>> way, and then looping back and re-developing it with the necessary safety
>> analysis, etc. in place using more traditional processes.
>>
>> All that said, I have a report titled, "AAMI
>> TIR45: 2012 Technical Information Report Guidance on the use of AGILE
>> practices in the development of medical device software". AAMI is the
>> "Association for the Advancment of Medical Instrumentation" and they're
>> based at
>> 4301 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 301
>> Arlington, VA USA 22203-1633
>> www.aami.org
>>
>> The report abstract states, "Over the past several years, AGILE
>> software development has become an accepted method for developing software
>> products. There have been questions from both manufacturers and regulators
>> as to whether (or which) AGILE practices are appropriate for developing
>> medical device software. Enough medical device manufacturers have
>> implemented AGILE practices in their software development so that answers
>> to these questions can be documented. Having clear guidance of which
>> practices have been found to be appropriate will be very useful for all
>> developers of medical device software. This TIR will provide
>> recommendations for complying with international standards and U.S. Food
>> and Drug Administration (FDA) guidance documents when using AGILE practices
>> to develop medical device software."
>>
>> A preview copy is at:
>>
>> http://marketplace.aami.org/eseries/scriptcontent/docs/Preview%20Files/TIR45_1208_preview.pdf
>>
>> I have a licensed copy, but it's copyrighted material and can't be
>> shared. If you're really interested in the content, you'll have to get a
>> copy on your own (sorry).
>>
>> Having said that, three comments about all this:
>>
>> 1) I don't know what sort of status AAMI has with respect to FDA policy
>> on medical device software development. In other words, I don't know if the
>> FDA has actually agreed to this, or it's simply AAMI's suggestion on how
>> one might approach it.
>>
>> 2) The AAMI approach talks about agile development in a way that's very
>> consistent with how most competent people would characterize agile
>> development.
>>
>> 3) I took a look at the Bruce Douglass report that Geoffrey Biggs
>> mentioned (Thanks, Geoffrey)
>>
>> http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/rational/library/agile-analysis-practices-safety-critical-development/
>> I've worked with Bruce before, and I have a lot of respect for his
>> work. However, I'd be willing to bet that most people who really understand
>> what agile development is could easily argue that the Harmony method
>> discussed by Bruce would not be considered agile. It's clearly iterative,
>> but iteration alone does not constitute true agility. *I* wouldn't
>> consider the Harmony method described by Bruce to be truly agile.
>>
>>
>> -- steve
>>
>>
>>
>> From: René Senden <rene.senden at gmail.com>
>> Date: Monday, September 2, 2013 8:32 AM
>> To: 'M Mencke' <menckem at gmail.com>
>> Cc: "systemsafety at techfak.uni-bielefeld.de" <
>> systemsafety at techfak.uni-bielefeld.de>
>>
>> Subject: Re: [SystemSafety] Agile methods
>>
>> Myriam,****
>>
>> ** **
>>
>> You are right about my initial question being somewhat polarizing,
>> perhaps because I tacitly assumed that anyone who’d answer this question
>> with “Yes”, would also include some****
>>
>> of the corresponding experiences … Regarding experience with
>> reconciliation of agile environments with typical/common/… (software)
>> safety standards, I am very interested in the ****
>>
>> development processes and corresponding results/evidence/outputs, all
>> this should be auditable. Is it (at all) possible to harmonize these very
>> different worlds, or would any such ****
>>
>> attempt result in compromising either? Transparency, auditability,
>> documentation, and safety specific processes such as analyses are examples
>> that, to me, seem to be particularly ****
>>
>> difficult to address in an agile environment, let’s take “scrum” as an
>> example of a popular agile approach.****
>>
>> ** **
>>
>> Rene****
>>
>> ** **
>>
>> ** **
>>
>> *From:* systemsafety-bounces at lists.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de [
>> mailto:systemsafety-bounces at lists.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de<systemsafety-bounces at lists.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de>]
>> *On Behalf Of *M Mencke
>> *Sent:* maandag 2 september 2013 14:39
>> *To:* Jon Davies
>> *Cc:* systemsafety at techfak.uni-bielefeld.de
>> *Subject:* Re: [SystemSafety] Agile methods****
>>
>> ** **
>>
>> René,****
>>
>> I have come across a situation in the railway field where an
>> organization was required by the customer to comply with a safety standard
>> which has specific requirements on the software development process, in
>> this case, EN 50128, where this was previously not required. ****
>>
>> It seems to me that this type of situation typically arises in
>> industries/products where the SIL concept has traditionally not been
>> applied, or is being introduced. The customer creates a “SIL requirement”
>> as a type of marketing argument, where the SIL is understood by the
>> customer as applying to equipment rather than to a function (in order to be
>> able to state “This equipment is SIL X” in commercial scenarios).****
>>
>> Regarding your question, “Have you encountered a situation, in
>> industrial practice, in which an organization developing software following
>> an agile methodology has to comply with a safety standard which has
>> specific requirements on the software development process?” ****
>>
>> This is a polar question, which can only be answered with a yes/no. ****
>>
>> If you are interested in practical experience, it might be useful to add
>> to this question which aspect(s) of such a situation you are interested in.
>> For example, if the answer is “yes”, was the project actually a success?
>> Which measures/procedures were implemented in the company to approach this
>> problem and reconcile the development process with such requirements?, etc.
>> ****
>>
>> Depending on the type of information you are seeking, it may not be
>> possible to provide particular details regarding such a state of affairs,
>> as this information may be company-specific.****
>>
>> Regards,****
>>
>> Myriam.****
>>
>> ** **
>>
>> 2013/9/2 Jon Davies <jdavies at theiet.org>****
>>
>> On 30 August 2013 18:02, René Senden <rene.senden at gmail.com> wrote:
>> > Dear all,
>> >****
>>
>> > Do any of you have practical experience with reconciling established
>> agile
>> > software development with software safety requirements (e.g. IEC-61508
>> or
>> > DO-178..) ?****
>>
>> Yes, and we usually end up throwing away the software developed using
>> "agile" methods, and starting again properly.
>>
>> I'm taking "agile software development" as meaning the development of
>> software using processes consistent with the agile manifesto:
>> http://agilemanifesto.org/ - to quote the relevant part:
>> "...we value... working software over comprehensive documentation"
>>
>> this is fundamentally in conflict with many of the things we know
>> about building high integrity software, and so "agile" methods are
>> fundamentally in conflict with developing software for safety critical
>> systems.
>>
>> There's plenty to learn from agile development methods that might be
>> useful in high integrity software development, but that's a whole
>> different discussion. Every time we discuss agile development here,
>> we end up back at the need to use a development process that builds in
>> correctness - we can't test exhaustively, so we need a process that
>> builds integrity in. Agile methods don't do this.
>>
>> Jon****
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> The System Safety Mailing List
>> systemsafety at TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE****
>>
>> ** **
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> The System Safety Mailing List
>> systemsafety at TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Prof. Nancy Leveson
> Aeronautics and Astronautics and Engineering Systems
> MIT, Room 33-334
> 77 Massachusetts Ave.
> Cambridge, MA 02142
>
> Telephone: 617-258-0505
> Email: leveson at mit.edu
> URL: http://sunnyday.mit.edu
>
--
Prof. Nancy Leveson
Aeronautics and Astronautics and Engineering Systems
MIT, Room 33-334
77 Massachusetts Ave.
Cambridge, MA 02142
Telephone: 617-258-0505
Email: leveson at mit.edu
URL: http://sunnyday.mit.edu
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de/mailman/private/systemsafety/attachments/20130902/c409b241/attachment-0001.html>
More information about the systemsafety
mailing list