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Study
PATIENT SAFETY PRIMERS
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Safety Target
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Device-related Complications (4)
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Diagnostic Errors (21)
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Identification Errors (7)
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Discontinuities, Gaps, and Hand-Off Problems (68)
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Fatigue and Sleep Deprivation (12)
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Medication Safety (138)
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Medical Complications (23)
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Nonsurgical Procedural Complications (3)
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Surgical Complications (22)
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Psychological and Social Complications (107)
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Asia (11)
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Epidemiology of Errors and Adverse Events (161)
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Active Errors (53)
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Latent Errors (16)
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Near Miss (11)
Approach to Improving Safety
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Quality Improvement Strategies (80)
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Legal and Policy Approaches (24)
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Error Reporting and Analysis (137)
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Human Factors Engineering (17)
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Teamwork (59)
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Specialization of Care (30)
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Logistical Approaches (67)
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Culture of Safety (77)
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Technologic Approaches (100)
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Education and Training (84)
Clinical Areas
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Allied Health Services (3)
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Medicine (425)
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Nursing (40)
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Pharmacy (49)
Target Audience
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Health Care Providers (323)
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Health Care Executives and Administrators (376)
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Non-Health Care Professionals (303)
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Patients (2)
Setting of Care
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Hospitals (265)
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Psychiatric Facilities (1)
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Residential Facilities (6)
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Ambulatory Care (170)
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Patient Transport (3)
1 - 20
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STUDY
Working conditions in primary care: physician reactions and care quality.
Linzer M, Manwell LB, Williams ES, et al; MEMO Investigators. Ann Intern Med. 2009;151:28-36.
STUDY
Development and early experience from an intervention to facilitate teamwork between general practices and allied health providers: the Team-link study.
Harris MF, Chan BC, Daniel C, Wan Q, Zwar N, Davies GP. BMC Health Serv Res. 2010;10:104.
STUDY
Approaches to reducing the most important patient errors in primary health-care: patient and professional perspectives.
Buetow S, Kiata L, Liew T, Kenealy T, Dovey S, Elwyn G. Health Soc Care Community. 2010;18:296-303.
STUDY
Patients' perceptions of safety if interpersonal continuity of care were to be disrupted.
Pandhi N, Schumacher J, Flynn KE, Smith M. Health Expect. 2008;11:400-408.
STUDY
Emotional impact of patient safety incidents on family physicians and their office staff.
O'Beirne M, Sterling P, Palacios-Derflingher L, Hohman S, Zwicker K. J Am Board Fam Med. 2012;25:177-183.
STUDY
Communication and collaboration: it's about the pharmacists, as well as the physicians and nurses.
Holden LM, Watts DD, Walker PH. Qual Saf Health Care. 2010;19:169-172.
STUDY
How improving practice relationships among clinicians and nonclinicians can improve quality in primary care.
Lanham HJ, McDaniel RR, Crabtree BF, et al. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2009;35:457-466.
STUDY
Improving prescription drug warnings to promote patient comprehension.
Wolf MS, Davis TC, Bass PF, et al. Arch Intern Med. 2010;170:50-56.
STUDY
The relationship of self-report of quality to practice size and health information technology.
Gorman PN, O'Malley JP, Fagnan LJ. J Am Board Fam Med. 2012;25:614-624.
STUDY
The management of test results in primary care: does an electronic medical record make a difference?
Elder NC, McEwen TR, Flach J, Gallimore J, Pallerla H. Fam Med. 2010;42:327-333.
STUDY
Safety climate and its association with office type and team involvement in primary care.
Gehring K, Schwappach DL, Battaglia M, et al. Int J Qual Health Care. 2013 May 10; [Epub ahead of print].
STUDY
Confidential reporting of patient safety events in primary care: results from a multilevel classification of cognitive and system factors.
Kostopoulou O, Delaney B. Qual Saf Health Care. 2007;16:95-100.
STUDY
Assessing the value of electronic prescribing in ambulatory care: A focus group study.
Weingart SN, Massagli M, Cyrulik A, et al. Int J Med Inform. 2009;78:571-578.
STUDY
Development of a tool within the electronic medical record to facilitate medication reconciliation after hospital discharge.
Schnipper JL, Liang CL, Hamann C, et al. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2011;18:309-313.
STUDY
Performance of a fail-safe system to follow up abnormal mammograms in primary care.
Grossman E, Phillips RS, Weingart SN. J Patient Saf. 2010;6:172-179.
STUDY
Using an electronic prescribing system to ensure accurate medication lists in a large multidisciplinary medical group.
Stock R, Scott J, Gurtel S. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2009;35:271-279.
STUDY
Receptionist input to quality and safety in repeat prescribing in UK general practice: ethnographic case study.
Swinglehurst D, Greenhalgh T, Russell J, Myall M. BMJ. 2011;343:d6788.
STUDY
Harm caused by adverse events in primary care: a clinical observational study.
Wetzels R, Wolters R, van Weel C, Wensing M. J Eval Clin Pract. 2009;15:323-327.
STUDY
Quality of clinical aspects of call handling at Dutch out of hours centres: cross sectional national study.
Derkx HP, Rethans JE, Muijtjens AM, et al. BMJ. 2008;337:a1264.
STUDY
Burden of difficult encounters in primary care: data from the Minimizing Error, Maximizing Outcomes Study.
An PG, Rabatin JS, Manwell LB, Linzer M, Brown RL, Schwartz MD, for the MEMO Investigators. Arch Intern Med. 2009;169:410-414.
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