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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 3277 Results

Institute for Healthcare Improvement. September 13 - November 7, 2023.

Root cause analysis (RCA) is a widely recognized retrospective strategy for learning from failure that is challenging to implement. This series of webinars will feature an innovative approach to RCA that expands on the concept to facilitate its use in incident investigations. Instructors for the series will include Dr. Terry Fairbanks and Dr. Tejal K. Gandhi.
Wiegand AA, Sheikh T, Zannath F, et al. BMJ Qual Saf. 2023;Epub May 10.
Sexual and gender minority (SGM) patients may experience poor quality of healthcare due to stigma and discrimination. This qualitative study explored diagnostic challenges and the impact of diagnostic errors among 20 participants identifying as sexual minorities and/or gender minorities. Participants attribute diagnostic error to provider-level and personal challenges and how diagnostic error worsened health outcomes and led to disengagement from healthcare. The authors of this article also summarize patient-proposed solutions to diagnostic error through the use of inclusive language, increasing education and training on SGM topics, and inclusion of more SGM individuals in healthcare.
Cohen TN, Berdahl CT, Coleman BL, et al. J Nurs Care Qual. 2023;Epub May 9.
Institutional error and near-miss reporting helps identify systemic weaknesses and areas for improvement. COVID-19 presented a unique environment to study error reporting during organizationally stressful times. In this study, incident reports of medication errors or near misses during a COVID-19 surge were analyzed. Skill-based (e.g., forgetting to administer a dose) and communication errors were the most common medication safety events.
May 4, 2023
The implementation of effective patient safety initiatives is challenging due to the complexity of the health care environment. This curated library shares resources summarizing overarching ideas and strategies that can aid in successful program execution, establishment, and sustainability.
Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority. Harrisburg, PA: Patient Safety Authority; April 2023.
This report summarizes patient safety improvement work in the state of Pennsylvania. It reviews the 2022 activities of the Patient Safety Authority that reflected a strategic emphasis on reporting compliance and data quality. Additional sections cover educational, publication, and learning management system efforts.
Perspective on Safety April 26, 2023

Throughout 2022, AHRQ PSNet has shared research that elucidates the complex nature of misdiagnosis and diagnostic safety. This Year in Review explores recent work in diagnostic safety and ways that greater safety may be promoted using tools developed to improve diagnostic practices.

Throughout 2022, AHRQ PSNet has shared research that elucidates the complex nature of misdiagnosis and diagnostic safety. This Year in Review explores recent work in diagnostic safety and ways that greater safety may be promoted using tools developed to improve diagnostic practices.

WebM&M Case April 26, 2023

This case involves a procedural sedation error in a 3-year-old patient who presented to the Emergency Department with a left posterior hip dislocation. The commentary summarizes the indications and risks of procedural sedation in non-surgical settings and highlights the value of implementing system-wide safety protocols and practices to prevent medication administration errors during high-risk procedures.

Richburg CE, Dossett LA, Hughes TM. Surg Clin North Am. 2023;103:271-285.
Cognitive biases can threaten patient safety in a variety of ways. This narrative review summarizes the common cognitive biases in surgical care and how they threaten patient safety, including delays in diagnosis and treatment, unnecessary surgeries, and intraoperative errors and complications. The authors also discuss cognitive debiasing strategies to mitigate the impact of cognitive biases.

Horsham, PA; Institute for Safe Medication Practices: April 2023.

Community pharmacies are common providers of medication delivery that harbor process weaknesses affecting safety. This guidance shares evidence-based steps to address problems such as wrong patient errors and lack of consistent barcode system use in the community setting.
Quan SF, Landrigan CP, Barger LK, et al. J Clin Sleep Med. 2023;19:673-683.
Fatigue and sleep deprivation among healthcare workers can increase the risk of errors. This prospective study including 60 attending surgeons from departments of surgery or obstetrics and gynecology at eight hospitals found that sleep deficiency was not associated with greater numbers of errors during procedures performed the next day. However, non-technical skill performance, situational awareness, and decision making were adversely associated with sleep deficiency.  
Crowley N. Prim Care. 2023;50:89-101.
Patients living with obesity face increased health risks due to poor equipment availability and provider bias. This article details the types of bias (i.e., implicit and explicit) experienced by people with obesity and its impact, suggestions for person-first language, and ways for clinicians to engage patients in discussions about their weight.
Rosner BI, Zwaan L, Olson APJ. Diagnosis (Berl). 2023;10:31-37.
Peer feedback is an emerging approach to improving clinicians’ diagnostic reasoning skills. The authors outline several barriers to diagnostic performance feedback and propose solutions to improve diagnostic performance.
Emani S, Rodriguez JA, Bates DW. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2023;30:995-999.
Electronic health records (EHR) are essential for recording patients' clinical data but may also perpetuate stigma, particularly for people of color. This article describes how the EHR can perpetuate individual, organizational, and structural racism and ways organizations, researchers, practitioners, and vendors can address racism.
Auerbach AD, Astik GJ, O’Leary KJ, et al. J Gen Intern Med. 2023;Epub Mar 23.
COVID-19 ushered in new diagnostic challenges and changes in care practices. In this study conducted during the first wave of the pandemic, charts for hospitalized adult patients under investigation (PUI) for COVID-19 were reviewed for potential diagnostic error. Diagnostic errors were identified in 14% of cases; patients with and without diagnostic errors were statistically similar and errors were not associated with pandemic-related change practices.
Dresser S, Teel C, Peltzer J. Int J Nurs Stud. 2023;139:104436.
Understanding how nurses use their clinical judgment in activating early warning systems or rapid response teams is important in improving response to deteriorating patients. Interviews with 20 nurses revealed an overarching sense of responsibility to their patients, eight subthemes including experience, making sense of the data, and a culture of teamwork.
Feinstein JA, Orth LE. J Pediatr. 2023;254:4-10.
Children with medical complexity (CMC) frequently take multiple medications, often from multiple prescribers. This commentary describes the particular vulnerabilities CMC face throughout the medication use cycle, along with ways for the prescriber and system to mitigate the risks of polypharmacy.
Perspective on Safety March 29, 2023

In the past several decades, technological advances have opened new possibilities for improving patient safety. Using technology to digitize healthcare processes has the potential to increase standardization and efficiency of clinical workflows and to reduce errors and cost across all healthcare settings.1 However, if technological approaches are designed or implemented poorly, the burden on clinicians can increase. For example, overburdened clinicians can experience alert fatigue and fail to respond to notifications. This can lead to more medical errors.

In the past several decades, technological advances have opened new possibilities for improving patient safety. Using technology to digitize healthcare processes has the potential to increase standardization and efficiency of clinical workflows and to reduce errors and cost across all healthcare settings.1 However, if technological approaches are designed or implemented poorly, the burden on clinicians can increase. For example, overburdened clinicians can experience alert fatigue and fail to respond to notifications. This can lead to more medical errors.

WebM&M Case March 29, 2023

This case describes a 13-year-old girl who presented to several health care providers with typical symptoms, physical signs, and early laboratory findings suggestive of adrenal insufficiency (AI) yet the diagnosis was delayed for several months due to diagnostic biases. After she suffered a sudden cardiac arrest during a visit to her local emergency department and was airlifted to a tertiary care facility, she was found to be in adrenal crisis secondary to Addison’s disease.

El Hussein MT, Hirst SP. J Nurs Reg. 2023;13:54-65.
Simulation-based training allows learners to learn and practice technical and non-technical skills in a low-risk environment. This review examines the effect of high-fidelity simulation (HFS) on clinical reasoning in nursing students. Results suggest HFS does improve clinical reasoning, but the included studies typically did not directly link improved clinical reasoning to improved patient safety.