- Normalcy Bias - "shut down and pretend everything is normal"
- Motivated Blindness - "don't see what is not in their interest to see"
- Bystander Effect - "the more people are around to witness the crime, the less likely they are to intervene"
- Self Deception - "we attend to the facts we like, and suppress the ones we don't"
- Blind Spots - "when it comes time to make a decision, our thoughts are dominated by thoughts about how we want to behave; thoughts of how we should behave disappear"
But this is ultimately what is means to be a leader - whether spiritual, political, or organizational - and to create an organizational culture: help to guide human nature - despite its many failings, blind spots, self deception, and biases - to achieve a purpose and pursue actions that no individual would undertake on his/ her own.
Many of us see these individual failings consistently in our healthcare organizations, which have largely been build around the notion that failure of behavior is an individual failing. Sometimes these individual failings are just as egregious as the examples used by Brooks when staff, managers, and executives "stand by" and allow for actions to be taken that lead to patient harm in the guise of "its just the way things work around here".
However, as many industry leaders have been pointing out - particularly the stalwarts for patient safety - individual behavior may contribute to a failing, but it is not the cause. The system (i.e., culture or society) that allows that behavior to be manifest is the cause. If we want better behavior, decisions, actions or ultimately the outcomes which result from these behaviors, then we have to work with greater diligence to build the leadership, systems, and culture that will allow individual failings to be overcome or at least held in check. The likelihood of harm is just as great, and not at all excused because the victims are sometimes unknown, or because it happens within a building and not on the street.