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- Patient Safety Primers 3
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Perspectives on Safety
34
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Journal Article
1296
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- Review 158
- Study 787
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Audiovisual
39
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Tools/Toolkit
16
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Approach to Improving Safety
- Communication Improvement 530
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Culture of Safety
120
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Education and Training
445
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Error Reporting and Analysis
664
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Error Reporting
254
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Human Factors Engineering
388
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Legal and Policy Approaches
205
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Quality Improvement Strategies
494
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Safety Target
- Alert fatigue 11
- Device-related Complications 113
- Diagnostic Errors 450
- Discontinuities, Gaps, and Hand-Off Problems 268
- Drug shortages 4
- Failure to rescue 5
- Fatigue and Sleep Deprivation 15
- Identification Errors 114
- Inpatient suicide 3
- Interruptions and distractions 44
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Medical Complications
162
- Delirium 5
- Medication Safety 749
- MRI safety 3
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Nonsurgical Procedural Complications
74
- Cardiology 11
- Psychological and Social Complications 100
- Second victims 9
- Surgical Complications 301
- Transfusion Complications 11
Setting of Care
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Ambulatory Care
272
- Home Care 18
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Hospitals
1551
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General Hospitals
657
- Operating Room 272
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General Hospitals
657
- Long-Term Care 30
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Clinical Area
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Medicine
1829
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Internal Medicine
611
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Target Audience
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Health Care Executives and Administrators
1412
- Nurse Managers 157
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Health Care Providers
1605
- Nurses 223
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Non-Health Care Professionals
725
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Error Types
- Active Errors
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Search results for "Active Errors"
- Active Errors
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Meeting/Conference > Kansas Meeting/Conference
Second Victim Train-the-Trainer Workshop.
Center for Patient Safety and University of Missouri. November 10, 2017; Saint Luke's North Hospital, Barry Road, Kansas City, MO.
Second victims are clinicians who experience considerable emotional distress, shame, and self-doubt after being involved in a medical error. This workshop will explore strategies to build an organizational program that addresses individual stages of recovery and trains peers to participate in that process. Sue Scott will lead the session.
Meeting/Conference > Massachusetts Meeting/Conference
Improving Patient Safety With Human Factors Methods.
Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality. October 26–27, 2017; Constellation Energy Building, Baltimore, MD.
This two-day workshop will discuss of how human factors engineering methods can be applied to identify risks, augment the work environment, and evaluate technology to address potential system failures in health care.
Meeting/Conference > Massachusetts Meeting/Conference
Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality Improvement 2017.
Harvard Medical School. October 16-17, 2017; Sheraton Boston Hotel, Boston, MA.
This workshop offers insights from safety leaders about applying strategies and guidelines to quality and safety improvement in the acute care setting. This conference has expanded its scope beyond clinicians and patient safety officers to provide educational resources for pharmacists and nurses. Keynote speakers include James Conway and Dr. Thomas H. Lee.
Meeting/Conference > Oregon Meeting/Conference
Speak Up for Patient Safety: Communicating Before, During and After an Adverse Event.
Oregon Patient Safety Commission. August 11, 2017; OMEF Event Center, Portland, OR.
Effective communication among clinical teams and with patients and families is a key component of safe patient care. This workshop will discuss strategies to enhance communication among staff and patients, including concepts from TeamSTEPPS and how to foster a culture that promotes identifying areas for improvement and remaining transparent during an incident.
Meeting/Conference > District of Columbia Meeting/Conference
Improving Diagnosis in Health Care: An Implementation Workshop.
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. July 17, 2017; National Academy of Sciences Building, Washington, DC.
Diagnostic error gained recognition as a patient safety concern with the publication of the Improving Diagnosis in Health Care report in 2015. This workshop will discuss progress since the report's release and review strategies for building on those successes to reduce diagnostic error.
Cases & Commentaries
Delayed Recognition of a Positive Blood Culture
- Web M&M
Sarah Doernberg, MD, MAS; July 2017
A woman was discharged with instructions to complete an antibiotic course for C. difficile. The same day, the microbiology laboratory notified the patient's nurse that her blood culture grew Listeria monocytogenes, a bacterium that can cause life-threatening infection. However, the result was not communicated to the medical team prior to discharge.
Cases & Commentaries
Pseudo-obstruction But a Real Perforation
- Spotlight Case
- CME/CEU
- Web M&M
Shirley C. Paski, MD, MSc, and Jason A. Dominitz, MD, MHS; July 2017
Following an uncomplicated surgery, an older man developed acute colonic pseudo-obstruction refractory to conservative management. During a decompression colonoscopy, the patient's colon was perforated.
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Death due to pharmacy compounding error reinforces need for safety focus.
ISMP Medication Safety Alert! Acute Care Edition. June 15, 2017;22:1-4.
Compounding pharmacies prepare medicines for patients that aren't available as commercial products. Reviewing a case involving a pediatric patient who died after receiving a compounded oral liquid suspension that contained the wrong medication, this newsletter article discusses weaknesses in compounding processes that contributed to the incident. Recommendations for pharmacies to reduce opportunities for error include independent double-checks and designated areas for compounding activities.
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Rude providers jeopardize patient safety. So stop it.
Thew J. HealthLeaders Media. June 14, 2017.
Rudeness can affect teamwork and hinder safe, transparent care. This news article reports on one hospital's approach to manage disruptive behavior through strategies such as peer identification and proactive behavior adjustment.
Cases & Commentaries
Chest Tube Complications
- Web M&M
Lekshmi Santhosh, MD, and V. Courtney Broaddus, MD; June 2017
A woman with pneumothorax required urgent chest tube placement. After she showed improvement during her hospital stay, the pulmonary team requested the tube be disconnected and clamped with a follow-up radiograph 1 hour later. However, 3 hours after the tube was clamped, no radiograph had been done and the patient was found unresponsive, in cardiac arrest.
Cases & Commentaries
Diagnostic Overshadowing Dangers
- Web M&M
Maria C. Raven, MD, MPH, MSc; June 2017
Presenting with pain in her epigastric region and back, an older woman with a history of opioid abuse had abnormal vital signs and an elevated troponin level. Imaging revealed multiple spinal fractures and cord compression. Neurosurgery recommended conservative management overnight. However, her troponin levels spiked, and an ECG revealed myocardial infarction.
Journal Article > Commentary
Enhanced time out: an improved communication process.
Nelson PE. AORN J. 2017;105:564-570.
The Universal Protocol requires hospitals to adopt time outs as a strategy to prevent wrong-site surgeries. This commentary describes how one organization combined elements of time outs and the surgical safety checklist to augment communication and teamwork in surgical settings. Implementation of the enhanced time out involved targeted education and clarity around surgical roles and responsibilities.
Patient Safety Primers
Falls
Falls are a common source of patient harm in hospitals, and are considered a never event when they result in serious injury. Fall prevention requires a coordinated, multidisciplinary approach that entails individualized risk assessment and preventive interventions.
Journal Article > Commentary
Implementation of a modified bedside handoff for a postpartum unit.
Wollenhaup CA, Stevenson EL, Thompson J, Gordon HA, Nunn G. J Nurs Adm. 2017;47:320-326.
Ineffective team communication can contribute to sentinel events. This commentary describes how a rural hospital's postpartum unit redesigned its handoff process to create a bedside handoff model and utilized structured educational modalities and nurse champions to drive improvement and acceptance of the approach.
Patient Safety Primers
Patient Safety 101
This Primer provides an overview of the history and current status of the patient safety field and key definitions and concepts. It links to other Patient Safety Primers that discuss the concepts in more detail.
Journal Article > Study
Proactive risk assessment of surgical site infections in ambulatory surgery centers.
Bish EK, Azadeh-Fard N, Steighner LA, Hall KK, Slonim AD. J Patient Saf. 2017;13:69-75.
This study reports on the use of a prospective risk assessment tool to identify risks for surgical site infection in an ambulatory surgery center. A safety intervention was developed that specifically targeted the vulnerabilities identified by the risk assessment. Other methods of prospective error detection are discussed in the Detection of Safety Hazards Patient Safety Primer.
Cases & Commentaries
The Perils of Contrast Media
- Spotlight Case
- CME/CEU
- Web M&M
Umar Sadat, MD, PhD, and Richard Solomon, MD; June 2017
To avoid worsening acute kidney injury in an older man with possible mesenteric ischemia, the provider ordered an abdominal CT without contrast, but the results were not diagnostic. Shortly later, the patient developed acute paralysis, and an urgent CT with contrast revealed blockage and a blood clot.
Journal Article > Study
Association of a surgical task during training with team skill acquisition among surgical residents: the missing piece in multidisciplinary team training.
Sparks JL, Crouch DL, Sobba K, et al. JAMA Surg. 2017 May 24; [Epub ahead of print].
Multiple studies have linked poor teamwork and communication to adverse events in the operating room. There is a growing recognition that surgeons must learn these nontechnical skills during training in addition to the traditional focus on technical ability. In this controlled study, surgical residents participated in an educational intervention (a simulated surgical emergency) that simultaneously targeted technical and nontechnical skill development. The study used two different types of simulation—high fidelity (a cadaver) and medium fidelity (an anatomically correct mannequin)—compared to a control group, which used a nonanatomic simulator. Investigators found that nontechnical skills improved in both intervention groups compared to the control group, measured using validated teamwork assessments. As the accompanying editorial notes, the study findings indicate that technical and nontechnical skills may be best taught together, as teamwork skills improved when residents also had to perform a simulated surgical task simultaneously.
Journal Article > Commentary
Challenges and opportunities from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) research summit on improving diagnosis: a proceedings review.
Henriksen K, Dymek C, Harrison MI, Brady JP, Arnold SB. Diagnosis. 2017 May 23; [Epub ahead of print].
Diagnostic error gained recognition as a patient safety concern with the publication of the Improving Diagnosis in Health Care report. This commentary reviews insights shared at a conference convened to discuss issues associated with diagnosis, including the need for concrete definitions of diagnostic error, the role of technology in improvement, and organizational factors that contribute to the problem.
Journal Article > Study
A national implementation project to prevent catheter-associated urinary tract infection in nursing home residents.
Mody L, Greene MT, Meddings J, et al. JAMA Intern Med. 2017 May 19; [Epub ahead of print].
Catheter-associated urinary tract infections are considered preventable never events. This pre–post implementation project conducted in long-term care facilities employed a multimodal intervention, similar to the Keystone ICU project. This sociotechnical approach included checklists, care team education, leadership engagement, communication interventions, and patient and family engagement. The project was conducted over a 2-year period across 48 states. In adjusted analyses, this effort led to a significant decrease in catheter-associated urinary tract infections, despite no change in catheter utilization, suggesting that needed use of catheters became safer. A related editorial declares this project "a triumph" for AHRQ's Safety Program for Long-term Care.
