Clinical Areas
Browse using Clinical Area if you would like to explore PSNet by the healthcare profession, such as the nursing or medical specialty, featured in the resources.
Latest by Clinical Areas
Australian and New Zealand Tripartite Anaesthetic Data Committee.
Reporting errors in anesthesiology practice can motivate and inform safety improvement work. This website serves as a secure mechanism for submitting incident reports to a centralized... Read More
Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; September 2023. AHRQ Publication no. 23-0055.
Falls are a frequently reported sentinel event. This Data Spotlight from AHRQ’s Network of Patient Safety Databases (NPSD) highlights the most common interventions in place among patients who... Read More
ISMP Medication Safety Alert! Acute Care. November 2, 2023;28(22):1-4.
Intravenous (IV) push medication administration is a primary therapeutic approach where process gaps can result in harm. This article examines existent... Read More
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press; 2023. ISBN: 9780309711937.
Maternal health care is rapidly emerging as a high-risk service that is vulnerable to communication, equity, and diagnostic challenges. This report examines... Read More
All Clinical Areas (601)
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press; 2023. ISBN: 9780309711937.
Fortis B, Bell L. Pro Publica. September 12, 2023.
Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research; August 22, 2023.
Desjardins L. PBS NewsHour. August 29, 2023.
West S. KFF Health News. August 24, 2023.
Addressing diagnostic errors to improve outcomes and patient safety has long been a problem in the US healthcare system.1 Many methods of reducing diagnostic error focus on individual factors and single cases, instead of focusing on the contribution of system factors or looking at diagnostic errors across a disease or clinical condition. Instead of addressing individual cases, KP sought to improve the disease diagnosis process and systems. The goal was to address the systemic root cause issues in systems that lead to diagnostic errors.
A 31-year-old pregnant patient with type 1 diabetes on an insulin pump was hospitalized for euglycemic diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA). She was treated for dehydration and vomiting, but not aggressively enough, and her metabolic acidosis worsened over several days. The primary team hesitated to prescribe medications safe in pregnancy and delayed reaching out to the Maternal Fetal Medicine (MFM) consultant, who made recommendations but did not ensure that the primary team received and understood the information.
This case describes a 27-year-old primigravid woman who requested neuraxial anesthesia during induction of labor. The anesthesia care provider, who was sleep deprived near the end of a 48-hour call shift (during which they only slept for 3 hours), performed the procedure successfully but injected an analgesic drug that was not appropriate for this indication. As a result, the patient suffered slower onset of analgesia and significant pruritis, and required more prolonged monitoring, than if she had received the correct medication.
Kwon S. KFF Health News. August 8, 2023
Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; July 2023.
Burton S. New York Times and Serial Productions. June 30-July 27, 2023.
Simmons-Duffin S. Health Shots. National Public Radio. July 20, 2023.
Board on Health Care Services, National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine. Irvine, CA: Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center: 2021-2023.