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Study
PATIENT SAFETY PRIMERS
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Safety Target
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Device-related Complications (87)
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Diagnostic Errors (171)
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Identification Errors (61)
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Discontinuities, Gaps, and Hand-Off Problems (306)
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Fatigue and Sleep Deprivation (63)
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Medication Safety (906)
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Medical Complications (276)
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Nonsurgical Procedural Complications (50)
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Surgical Complications (306)
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Psychological and Social Complications (86)
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Africa (4)
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Epidemiology of Errors and Adverse Events (1248)
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Active Errors (363)
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Latent Errors (91)
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Near Miss (64)
Approach to Improving Safety
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Quality Improvement Strategies (469)
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Legal and Policy Approaches (101)
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Error Reporting and Analysis (814)
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Communication Improvement (497)
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Human Factors Engineering (234)
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Teamwork (164)
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Specialization of Care (172)
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Logistical Approaches (190)
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Culture of Safety (203)
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Technologic Approaches (452)
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Education and Training (380)
Clinical Areas
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Allied Health Services (4)
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Dentistry (1)
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Medicine (1828)
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Nursing (225)
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Pharmacy (297)
Target Audience
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Health Care Providers (1793)
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Health Care Executives and Administrators (2005)
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Non-Health Care Professionals (821)
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Patients (27)
Setting of Care
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Hospitals (1639)
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Psychiatric Facilities (15)
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Residential Facilities (63)
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Ambulatory Care (276)
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Outpatient Surgery (18)
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Patient Transport (23)
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STUDY
Pediatric antidepressant medication errors in a national error reporting database.
Rinke ML, Bundy DG, Shore AD, Colantuoni E, Morlock LL, Miller MR. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2010;31:129-136.
STUDY
Wrong-site and wrong-patient procedures in the Universal Protocol era: analysis of a prospective database of physician self-reported occurrences.
Stahel PF, Sabel AL, Victoroff MS, et al. Arch Surg. 2010;145:978-984.
STUDY
Medication safety in a psychiatric hospital.
Rothschild JM, Mann K, Keohane CA, et al. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2007;29:156-162.
STUDY
Psychiatry morbidity and mortality rounds: implementation and impact.
Goldman S, Demaso DR, Kemler B. Acad Psychiatry. 2009;33:383-388.
STUDY
A comparison of voluntarily reported medication errors in intensive care and general care units.
Kane-Gill SL, Kowiatek JG, Weber RJ. Qual Saf Health Care. 2010;19:55-59.
STUDY
Listen carefully: the risk of error in spoken medication orders.
Lambert BL, Dickey LW, Fisher WM, et al. Soc Sci Med. 2010;70:1599-1608.
STUDY
Iatrogenic events resulting in intensive care admission: frequency, cause, and disclosure to patients and institutions.
Lehmann LS, Puopolo AL, Shaykevich S, Brennan TA. Am J Med. 2005;118:409-413.
STUDY
Determinants of patient-reported medication errors: a comparison among seven countries.
Lu CY, Roughead E. Int J Clin Pract. 2011;65:733-740.
STUDY
Paid malpractice claims for adverse events in inpatient and outpatient settings.
Bishop TF, Ryan AK, Casalino LP. JAMA. 2011;305:2427-2431.
STUDY
Adverse drug events in the outpatient setting: an 11-year national analysis.
Bourgeois FT, Shannon MW, Valim C, Mandl KD. Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2010;19:901-910.
STUDY
Ambulatory care adverse events and preventable adverse events leading to a hospital admission.
Woods DM, Thomas EJ, Holl JL, Weiss KB, Brennan TA. Qual Saf Health Care. 2007;16:127-131.
STUDY
Identifying and reducing medication errors in psychiatry: creating a culture of safety through the use of an adverse event reporting mechanism.
Jayaram G, Doyle D, Steinwachs D, Samuels J. J Psychiatr Pract. 2011;17:81–88.
STUDY
Medication error reporting in nursing homes: identifying targets for patient safety improvement.
Greene SB, Williams CE, Pierson S, Hansen RA, Carey TS. Qual Saf Health Care. 2010;19:218-222.
STUDY
Fall prevention in acute care hospitals: a randomized trial.
Dykes PC, Carroll DL, Hurley A, et al. JAMA. 2010;304:1912-1918.
STUDY
Paramedic self-reported medication errors.
Vilke GM, Tornabene SV, Stepanski B, et al. Prehosp Emerg Care. 2006;10:457-462.
STUDY
Improving ambulatory prescribing safety with a handheld decision support system: a randomized controlled trial.
Berner ES, Houston TK, Ray MN, et al. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2006;13:171-179.
STUDY
Standardized multidisciplinary protocol improves handover of cardiac surgery patients to the intensive care unit.
Joy BF, Elliott E, Hardy C, Sullivan C, Backer CL, Kane JM. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2011;12:304-308.
STUDY
Predictive value of alert triggers for identification of developing adverse drug events.
Moore C, Li J, Hung CC, Downs J, Nebeker JR. J Patient Saf. 2009;5:223-228.
STUDY
Effectiveness of a barcode medication administration system in reducing preventable adverse drug events in a neonatal intensive care unit: a prospective cohort study.
Morriss FH Jr, Abramowitz PW, Nelson SP, et al. J Pediatr. 2009;197:678-685.
STUDY
Consistency between coded poison center data and fatality abstract narratives for therapeutic error deaths in older adults.
Hayes BD, Klein-Schwartz W. Clin Toxicol (Phila). 2010;48:68-71.
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