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Information Professionals
PATIENT SAFETY PRIMERS
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Device-related Complications (14)
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Information Professionals
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Hospitals (281)
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STUDY
Electronic health records and malpractice claims in office practice.
Virapongse A, Bates DW, Shi P, et al. Arch Intern Med. 2008;168:2362-2367.
STUDY
The effect of health information technology on quality in U.S. hospitals.
McCullough JS, Casey M, Moscovice I, Prasad S. Health Aff (Millwood). 2010;29:647-654.
STUDY
What stands in the way of technology-mediated patient safety improvements? A study of facilitators and barriers to physicians' use of electronic health records.
Holden RJ. J Patient Saf. 2011;7:193-203.
COMMENTARY
Health information technology is a vehicle, not a destination: a conversation with David J. Brailer.
Milstein A. Health Aff (Millwood). 2007;26:w236-w241.
STUDY
The impact of electronic medical records data sources on an adverse drug event quality measure.
Kahn MG, Ranade D. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2010;17:185-191.
REVIEW
Systematic review of medication safety assessment methods.
Meyer-Massetti C, Cheng CM, Schwappach DL, et al. Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2011;68:227-240.
COMMENTARY
Passing the "Yo' Mama" test.
Blair R. Health Manage Tech. June 2006;27:16.
NEWSPAPER/MAGAZINE ARTICLE
Medical simulations identify potential problems before they can pose a real threat.
Kleefeld E. Wisconsin Technology Network. June 15, 2005.
MEETING/CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS
Making the Health Care System Safer Through Implementation and Innovation.
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Kaisernetwork.org Web site. June 8, 2005.
COMMENTARY
Time to sign off on signout.
Stein DM, Stetson PD. Acad Med. 2011;86:804-806.
COMMENTARY
Medical malpractice liability in the age of electronic health records.
Mangalmurti SS, Murtagh L, Mello MM. N Engl J Med. 2010;363:2060-2067.
STUDY
Patient safety perceptions of primary care providers after implementation of an electronic medical record system.
McGuire MJ, Noronha G, Samal L, Yeh HC, Crocetti S, Kravet S. J Gen Intern Med. 2013;28:184-192.
ORGANIZATIONAL POLICY/GUIDELINES
Electronic prescribing systems in pediatrics: the rationale and functionality requirements.
American Academy of Pediatrics Council on Clinical Information Technology. Pediatrics. 2007;119:1229-1231.
STUDY
The impact of prescribing safety alerts for elderly persons in an electronic medical record: an interrupted time series evaluation.
Smith DH, Perrin N, Feldstein A, et al. Arch Intern Med. 2006;166:1098-1104.
COMMENTARY
From tasks to processes: the case for changing health information technology to improve health care.
Walker JM, Carayon P. Health Aff. 2009;28:467-477.
STUDY
Use of electronic health records in US hospitals.
Jha AK, Desroches CM, Campbell EG, et al. N Engl J Med. 2009;360:1628-1638.
NEWSPAPER/MAGAZINE ARTICLE
The right dose of technology helps the medicine go down.
Patton S. CIO Magazine. November 1, 2005.
STUDY
The relationship between physician practice characteristics and physician adoption of electronic health records.
Bramble JD, Galt KA, Siracuse MV, et al. Health Care Manage Rev. 2010;35:55-64.
STUDY
Decreasing errors in pediatric continuous intravenous infusions.
Lehmann CU, Kim GR, Gujral R, Veltri MA, Clark JS, Miller MR. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2006;7:225-230.
STUDY
Patients use an internet technology to report when things go wrong.
Wasson JH, MacKenzie TA, Hall M. Qual Saf Health Care. 2007;16:213-215.
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