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The PSNet Collection: All Content

The AHRQ PSNet Collection comprises an extensive selection of resources relevant to the patient safety community. These resources come in a variety of formats, including literature, research, tools, and Web sites. Resources are identified using the National Library of Medicine’s Medline database, various news and content aggregators, and the expertise of the AHRQ PSNet editorial and technical teams.

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Displaying 1 - 20 of 18883 Results
Institute for Healthcare Improvement. March 6 - May 20, 2024.
Burnout among health care workers negatively affects system improvement. This webinar series will highlight strategies to establish a healthy work environment that strengthens teamwork, staff engagement, and resilience. Instructors include Dr. Donald Berwick and Derek Feeley.
Institute for Safe Medication Practices.
The Institute for Safe Medication Practices sponsors the annual Cheers Awards to recognize both individuals and institutions for their commitment to medication safety. The 2023 awards recognized Susan Donnell Scott PhD for her work focusing on support mechanisms for clinicians involved in medical error.
Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK: Care Quality Commission; October 2023.
This website provides access to an annual report that summarizes National Health Service hospital and social care performance across a range of care quality metrics at both the trust and service level. The 2022-2023 report found substantial weaknesses in specialty areas such as emergency and maternal care and recognized workforce wellbeing issues that impact access and quality.
Organization: Organization American College of Physicians ACP
Event Description: This three-day in person conference is the ACPs largest yearly event that focuses on Internal Medicine. There will be scientific and practice-related sessions, hands on learning experiences, and networking opportunities. There are events specifically address patient safety, including a pre-conference course on hospital medicine. 
Event Location: In Person: Boston, MA
Date: April 18 - 20, 2024
Event Fee: Fee Associated
CE or CME Offered? Yes
Winter SG, Sedgwick C, Wallace-Lacey A, et al. Clin Ther. 2023;45:928-934.
The VIONE (Vital, Important, Optional, Not indicated, and Every medication has an indication) tool is used to reduce polypharmacy and potentially inappropriate prescribing. This article provides an overview of VIONE implementation and dashboards used to track VIONE implementation and its impact on prescribing across over 130 Veterans Health Administration medical centers. Since implementation in 2016, VIONE has led to the discontinuation of over 1.6 million medication orders by more than 15,000 providers.
Lång K, Josefsson V, Larsson A-M, et al. Lancet Oncol. 2023;24:936-944.
Retrospective studies have shown artificial intelligence (AI) to be at least as accurate as radiologists in detecting breast cancer in screening mammograms. This prospective randomized trial similarly demonstrated that AI readings were as accurate as double readings by radiologists, but with a significantly reduced workload.
Arbaje AI, Greyson S, Keita Fakeye M, et al. J Patient Saf Risk Manag. 2023;28:201-207.
Older adult patients and family caregivers face numerous safety challenges when transitioning from the hospital to skilled home health (HH). This article describes how older adults and their family caregivers, HH frontline providers, HH leadership, and HH hospital-based transition coordinators, were engaged to identify best practices to implement the Hospital-to-Home Health Transition Quality (H3TQ) Index. This participatory co-design process identified ways patients, caregivers, and staff differ in how and when to administer the H3TQ Index, confirming the importance of engaging a wide range of stakeholders in design processes.

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 experienced a fall such as nonslip wear, bed height and visible risk identification. Data for the analysis includes reports on patient safety concerns submitted from 2009 through 2021.

American Hospital Association. December 7, 2023. 1:00-2:00 PM (eastern).

Health care organizations require a systems approach to address patient safety challenges and sustain improvements. This session will feature three health care executives who will discuss how to align quality and safety efforts to effectively measure performance, create value, and support transparency.

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 presence of recognized safe practice education in close to 200 surveyed nursing programs to assess the teaching of standardized practice behaviors at the student level and recommend strategies to embed IV safety into instruction efforts.

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 the role of disparities in care across the maternal care continuum and strategies to drive diagnostic improvement such as care bundles, midwives, and health information technology. This publication is from a series of programs and resultant publications on improving diagnostic excellence.

Galappatthy P, Mair A, Dhingra-Kumar N et al. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; 2023. ISBN 9789240058897.

Look-alike, sound-alike (LASA) medicines are known contributors to drug errors. This report discusses how name and label similarities degrade care, and the actions organizations and individual practitioners can take to mitigate the potential of LASA medication errors that cause harm. The authors discuss obstacles and enablers to implementing prevention strategies.

Arnal-Velasco, D, ed. Curr Opin Anaesthesiol. 2023;36(6):649-705.

Adoption of new ideas is necessary to create safety in the perioperative environment. This collection of reviews illustrates relationships and tensions between technology, human factors and safety management that create the sociotechnical system within which technology is used to deliver anesthesia. Topics covered include artificial intelligence, decision making and perioperative deterioration.
Weenink J-W, Tresfon J, van de Voort I, et al. BMC Health Serv Res. 2023;23:1048.
Promoting resilience across and within healthcare organizations is a key component of Safety-II. This qualitative study involving six teams across three hospitals in the Netherlands found that healthcare professionals, managers, and quality advisors hold differing perspectives regarding the right approach to clinical practices and the importance of certain clinical actions. The authors underscore the importance of team reflections to foster resilience and accountability across all levels within healthcare organizations.
Ruppel H, Dougherty M, Bonafide CP, et al. BMJ Open Qual. 2023;12:e002342.
Alarm fatigue can lead to desensitization to safety alerts and threaten patient safety. In this survey of 3,986 registered nurses, the majority (83%) reported alarm fatigue and over half (55%) experienced a situation where an alarm went unchecked despite a patient requiring urgent attention. The researchers found that alarm burden was more common among respondents who rated their hospital’s safety as poor or reported poor work environments.
Pozzobon LD, Rotter T, Sears K. Healthc Manage Forum. 2023;Epub Oct 13.
Patient and caregiver engagement in patient safety can improve individual outcomes and help identify safety threats. This article highlights the advantages of including patients in patient safety event reporting, including broadening the understanding of harm to include psychological and financial harms, identifying contributing factors to harm, and notes several organizational activities where patients and caregiver involvement can be integrated.
Porter TH, Peck JA, Bolwell B, et al. BMJ Lead. 2023;7:196-202.
Authentic leadership principles emphasize the influence of positive psychological capacities to foster self-awareness and self-regulated positive behaviors. This qualitative study used podcast transcripts to explore the experiences of senior leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic and the role of authentic leadership principles. The researchers identified several behaviors demonstrating authentic leadership and discuss its influence of psychological safety, particularly during a crisis.
O’Leary KJ, Johnson JK, Williams MV, et al. Ann Intern Med. 2023;Epub Oct 31.
Teamwork is an essential component of ensuring high quality, safe healthcare. This article describes findings from the Redesigning SystEms to Improve Teamwork and Quality for Hospitalized Patients (RESET) study, which evaluated the impact of complementary interventions to redesign unit-based care (unit-based physician teams, nurse-physician co-leadership, interprofessional rounds, performance reports, patient engagement) on interprofessional teamwork and patient outcomes. Findings demonstrate improved teamwork climate scores among nurses (but not physicians), but researchers did not identify a significant impact on patient outcomes.
Munn LT, Lynn MR, Knafl GJ, et al. J Res Nurs. 2023;28:354-364.
Nursing team dynamics can influence safety culture and willingness so speak up about errors and safety concerns. This survey of over 650 nurses and nurse managers underscored the importance of leader inclusiveness, safety climate, and psychological safety in cultivating speaking up behaviors among nursing team members.
Mudrik-Zohar H, Chowers M, Temkin E, et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2023;44:1562-1568.
Nosocomial infections remain a persistent patient safety issue and can lead to serious patient harm. This article describes one Israeli hospital’s experience using department-level investigations to reduce the incidence of nosocomial bloodstream infections. Study findings demonstrated that department-level investigations coupled with increased staff awareness led to significant reductions in nosocomial bloodstream infections.