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PATIENT SAFETY PRIMERS
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COURSE MATERIAL/CURRICULUM
Medical Errors and Patient Safety: A Curriculum Guide for Teaching Medical Students and Family Practice Residents.
Halbach JL, Sullivan L. Yonkers, NY: New York Medical College; 2003.
COURSE MATERIAL/CURRICULUM
Safe Foundations: Junior Doctors and Patient Safety.
National Patient Safety Agency.
STUDY
Patient safety knowledge and its determinants in medical trainees.
Kerfoot BP, Conlin PR, Travison T, McMahon GT. J Gen Intern Med. 2007;22:1150-1154.
STUDY
How trainees would disclose medical errors: educational implications for training programmes.
White AA, Bell SK, Krauss MJ, et al. Med Educ. 2011;45:372-380.
STUDY
Housestaff and medical student attitudes toward medical errors and adverse events.
Vohra PD, Johnson JK, Daugherty CK, Wen M, Barach P. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2007;33:493-501.
STUDY
Effectiveness of a graduate medical education program for improving medical event reporting attitude and behavior.
Coyle YM, Mercer SQ, Murphy-Cullen CL, Schneider GW, Hynan LS. Qual Saf Health Care. 2005;14:383-388.
STUDY
Safe medication prescribing: training and experience of medical students and housestaff at a large teaching hospital.
Garbutt JM, Highstein G, Jeffe DB, Dunagan WC, Fraser VJ. Acad Med. 2005;80:594-599.
COMMENTARY
Physical Diagnosis: A Lost Art?
Thompson GR, Verghese A. AHRQ WebM&M [serial online]. August 2006.
COMMENTARY
Pursuing professional accountability: an evidence-based approach to addressing residents with behavioral problems.
Sanfey H, DaRosa DA, Hickson GB, et al. Arch Surg. 2012;147:642-647.
STUDY
Patient safety and quality improvement education: a cross-sectional study of medical students' preferences and attitudes.
Teigland CL, Blasiak RC, Wilson LA, Hines RE, Meyerhoff KL, Viera AJ. BMC Med Educ. 2013;13:16.
STUDY
Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education technical skills competency compliance: urologic surgical skills.
Hammond L, Ketchum J, Schwartz BF. J Am Coll Surg. 2005;201:454-457.
REVIEW
Duty hours restriction and their effect on resident education and academic departments: the American perspective.
Swide CE, Kirsch JR. Curr Opin Anaesthesiol. 2007;20:580-584.
STUDY
An educational intervention for contextualizing patient care and medical students' abilities to probe for contextual issues in simulated patients.
Schwartz A, Weiner SJ, Harris IB, Binns-Calvey A. JAMA. 2010;304:1191-1197.
STUDY
Teaching but not learning: how medical residency programs handle errors.
Hoff TJ, Pohl H, Bartfield J. J Org Behav. 2006;27:869-896.
STUDY
An objective methodology for task analysis and workload assessment in anesthesia providers.
Weinger MB, Herndon OW, Zornow MH, Paulus MP, Gaba DM, Dallen LT. Anesthesiology. 1994;80:77-92.
COMMENTARY
The new recommendations on duty hours from the ACGME Task Force.
Nasca TJ, Day SH, Amis ES Jr; for ACGME Duty Hours Task Force. N Engl J Med. 2010;363:e3.
STUDY
Decreased bile duct injury rate during laparoscopic cholecystectomy in the era of the 80-hour resident workweek.
Yaghoubian A, Saltmarsh G, Rosing DK, et al. Arch Surg. 2008;143:847-851.
STUDY
Management of adverse surgical events: a structured education module for residents.
Brewster LP, Risucci DA, Joehl RJ, et al. Am J Surg. 2005;190:687-690.
COMMENTARY
Development and evaluation of a 1-day interclerkship program for medical students on medical errors and patient safety.
Moskowitz E, Veloski JJ, Fields SK, Nash DB. Am J Med Qual. 2007;22:13-17.
STUDY
Teaching medical students about medical errors and patient safety: evaluation of a required curriculum.
Halbach JL, Sullivan LL. Acad Med. 2005;80:600-606.
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