{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
##LOC[Cancel]##
Skip Navigation
www.ahrq.gov
search
home
whatsnew
collection
primers
glossary
newsletter
mypsnet
newsletter
The Collection
>
Organizational Behaviorists
PATIENT SAFETY PRIMERS
Narrow By
clear selections
Safety Target
•
Device-related Complications (5)
•
Diagnostic Errors (10)
•
Identification Errors (5)
•
Discontinuities, Gaps, and Hand-Off Problems (50)
•
Fatigue and Sleep Deprivation (12)
•
Medication Safety (76)
•
Medical Complications (31)
•
Nonsurgical Procedural Complications (4)
•
Surgical Complications (53)
•
Psychological and Social Complications (118)
Origin/Sponsor
•
Africa (1)
•
Asia (13)
•
Australia and New Zealand (29)
•
Europe (80)
•
North America (471)
Resource Types
•
Audiovisual (2)
•
Book/Report (40)
•
Journal Article (499)
•
Legislation/Regulation (3)
•
Meeting/Conference (8)
•
Newspaper/Magazine Article (43)
•
Press Release/Announcement (1)
•
Special or Theme Issue (10)
•
Tools/Toolkit (4)
•
Web Resource (6)
Error Types
•
Epidemiology of Errors and Adverse Events (53)
•
Active Errors (54)
•
Latent Errors (42)
•
Near Miss (10)
Approach to Improving Safety
•
Quality Improvement Strategies (147)
•
Legal and Policy Approaches (54)
•
Error Reporting and Analysis (155)
•
Communication Improvement (187)
•
Human Factors Engineering (57)
•
Teamwork (152)
•
Specialization of Care (29)
•
Logistical Approaches (41)
•
Culture of Safety (240)
•
Technologic Approaches (44)
•
Education and Training (148)
Clinical Areas
•
Allied Health Services (2)
•
Dentistry (1)
•
Medicine (336)
•
Nursing (79)
•
Pharmacy (22)
Target Audience
< All
Organizational Behaviorists
Setting of Care
•
Hospitals (351)
•
Psychiatric Facilities (1)
•
Residential Facilities (5)
•
Ambulatory Care (32)
•
Outpatient Surgery (1)
•
Patient Transport (6)
1 - 20
of 616
Show Excerpt
Don't Show Excerpt
Sort by relevance
Sort by significance
Sort by title
Sort by date
Sort by author
dropdown
STUDY
An investigation of the relationship between safety climate and medication errors as well as other nurse and patient outcomes.
Hofmann DA, Mark B. Personnel Psychol. 2006;59:847-869.
STUDY
The Safety Organizing Scale: development and validation of a behavioral measure of safety culture in hospital nursing units.
Vogus TJ, Sutcliffe KM. Med Care. 2007;45:46-54.
COMMENTARY
Improving patient safety: patient-focused, high-reliability team training.
McKeon LM, Cunningham PD, Detty Oswaks JS. J Nurs Care Qual. 2009;24:76-82.
STUDY
Oncology nurses' perceptions about involving patients in the prevention of chemotherapy administration errors.
Schwappach DLB, Hochreutener MA, Wernli M. Oncol Nurs Forum. 2010;37:E84-E91.
STUDY
A human factors framework and study of the effect of nursing workload on patient safety and employee quality of working life.
Holden RJ, Scanlon MC, Patel NR, et al. BMJ Qual Saf. 2011;20:15-24.
STUDY
Implementing a fatigue countermeasures program for nurses: a focus group analysis.
Scott LD, Hofmeister N, Rogness N, Rogers AE. J Nurs Adm. 2010;40:233-240.
STUDY
A secondary care nursing perspective on medication administration safety.
McBride-Henry K, Foureur M. J Adv Nurs. 2007;60:58-66.
STUDY
Performance-based payment incentives increase burden and blame for hospital nurses.
Kurtzman ET, O'Leary D, Sheingold BH, Devers KJ, Dawson EM, Johnson JE. Health Aff (Millwood). 2011;30:211-218.
REVIEW
The Nurse's Role in Promoting a Culture of Patient Safety.
Friesen MA, Farquhar MB, Hughes R. American Nurses Association (ANA) Continuing Education, Center for American Nurses; 2005.
NEWSPAPER/MAGAZINE ARTICLE
Raising the index of suspicion: red flags that represent credible threats to patient safety.
ISMP Medication Safety Alert! Acute Care Edition. July 26, 2012;17:1-3.
STUDY
A relational leadership perspective on unit-level safety climate.
Thompson DN, Hoffman LA, Sereika SM, et al. J Nurs Adm. 2011;41:479-487.
STUDY
Nurses' perceptions of causes of medication errors and barriers to reporting.
Ulanimo VM, O'Leary-Kelley C, Connolly PM. J Nurs Care Qual. 2007;22:28-33.
STUDY
Professional commitment, patient safety, and patient-perceived care quality.
Teng CI, Dai YT, Shyu YIL, Wong MK, Chu TL, Tsai YH. J Nurs Scholarsh. 2009;41:301-309.
BOOK/REPORT
First, Do Less Harm: Confronting the Inconvenient Problems of Patient Safety.
Koppel R, Gordon S, ed. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press; 2012. ISBN: 9780801450778.
STUDY
What does nursing teamwork look like? A qualitative study.
Kalisch BJ, Weaver SJ, Salas E. J Nurs Care Qual. 2009;24:298-307.
STUDY
Healthcare climate: a framework for measuring and improving patient safety.
Zohar D, Livne Y, Tenne-Gazit O, Admi H, Donchin Y. Crit Care Med. Crit Care Med. 2007;35:1312-1317.
STUDY
Tragedy into policy: a quantitative study of nurses' attitudes toward patient advocacy activities.
Black LM. Am J Nurs. 2011;111:26-35.
COMMENTARY
Toward a theory of self-reconciliation following mistakes in nursing practice.
Crigger NJ, Meek VL. J Nurs Scholarsh. 2007;39:177-183.
STUDY
Rural hospital nursing: better environments = shared vision and quality/safety engagement.
Newhouse R, Morlock L, Pronovost P, Colantuoni E, Johantgen M. J Nurs Adm. 2009;39:189-195.
STUDY
Nursing care quality and adverse events in US hospitals.
Lucero RJ, Lake ET, Aiken LH. J Clin Nurs. 2010;19:2185-2195.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Next >