Glossary

systemic corrective action

A corrective action aimed at removing a root cause across the system, not just fixing one isolated nonconformance.

Systemic corrective action is corrective action designed to remove the underlying cause of a problem across the broader process, system, or control environment, rather than only fixing the single instance where the issue was found. In manufacturing and quality systems, it commonly refers to changes that prevent recurrence in similar products, lines, sites, suppliers, documents, training, or workflows.

The term is often used in CAPA, NCR, 8D, and root cause analysis contexts. A systemic action goes beyond containment or local rework. It may include updates to procedures, inspection methods, equipment settings, master data, ERP or MES rules, training records, approval workflows, or supplier controls when those are part of the actual cause chain.

Systemic corrective action is commonly contrasted with point correction. For example, replacing one defective part corrects the immediate issue; revising the setup standard, error-proofing the process, and updating operator instructions to prevent the same defect elsewhere would be systemic corrective action. The term does not necessarily mean enterprise-wide action in every case, but it does imply that the response addresses the broader mechanism that allowed the problem to occur or escape detection.

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