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Resource Type
Approach to Improving Safety
- Communication Improvement 180
- Culture of Safety 15
-
Education and Training
40
- Students 2
- Error Reporting and Analysis 43
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Human Factors Engineering
32
- Checklists 15
- Legal and Policy Approaches 19
- Logistical Approaches 37
- Quality Improvement Strategies 64
- Specialization of Care 13
- Teamwork 13
- Technologic Approaches 70
Safety Target
- Alert fatigue 3
- Device-related Complications 1
- Diagnostic Errors 52
- Discontinuities, Gaps, and Hand-Off Problems
- Drug shortages 1
- Fatigue and Sleep Deprivation 3
- Identification Errors 12
- Inpatient suicide 1
- Interruptions and distractions 10
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Medical Complications
8
- Delirium 1
- Medication Safety 53
- Nonsurgical Procedural Complications 3
- Psychological and Social Complications 10
- Surgical Complications 16
Setting of Care
Clinical Area
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Medicine
240
- Gynecology 16
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Internal Medicine
86
- Cardiology 10
- Geriatrics 16
- Primary Care 15
- Radiology 11
- Nursing 24
- Palliative Care 1
- Pharmacy 22
Target Audience
Error Types
- Active Errors
- Epidemiology of Errors and Adverse Events 28
- Latent Errors 51
- Near Miss 2
Origin/Sponsor
- Africa 1
- Asia 2
- Australia and New Zealand 9
- Europe 33
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North America
133
- Canada 7
Search results for "Active Errors"
- Active Errors
- Discontinuities, Gaps, and Hand-Off Problems
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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.
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.
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Despite technology, verbal orders persist, read back is not widespread, and errors continue.
ISMP Medication Safety Alert! Acute Care Edition. May 18, 2017;22:1-4.
Verbal orders are known to increase risk of error in care. This newsletter article summarizes survey results that sought to characterize current verbal order behaviors. Notably, practices to improve the reliability of verbal orders such as read backs were not optimally integrated in medication processes. The article includes recommendations for organizations, individuals, and teams to improve the safety of verbal orders.
Journal Article > Commentary
An innovative collaborative model of care for undiagnosed complex medical conditions.
Nageswaran S, Donoghue N, Mitchell A, Givner LB. Pediatrics. 2017;139:e20163373.
Lack of collaboration among the clinical team can contribute to diagnostic problems. This commentary describes a collaborative model of care developed to enhance interdisciplinary teamwork across health care settings as a strategy to augment diagnosis for children with undiagnosed complex medical conditions.
Journal Article > Review
Improving patient safety in handover from intensive care unit to general ward: a systematic review.
Wibrandt I, Lippert A. J Patient Saf. 2017 Apr 27; [Epub ahead of print].
This systematic review of handoffs from intensive care to general ward identified eight intervention studies, none of which demonstrated improved mortality or lower readmission rates. Handoff strategies differed widely among the included studies. The authors recommend further study to identify best handoff practices for patients discharged from intensive care.
Journal Article > Study
Quality of handoffs in community pharmacies.
Abebe E, Stone JA, Lester CA, Chui MA. J Patient Saf. 2017 Apr 27; [Epub ahead of print].
Handoffs present a significant patient safety hazard across multiple health care settings. Interruptions and distractions, which can interfere with handoff communication, are prevalent in pharmacy environments. This cross-sectional survey of community pharmacies found that virtually none of the pharmacists had received training in how to hand off information. A significant proportion of responses indicated that pharmacy information technology systems do not support handoff communication. Respondents reported that handoffs are frequently inadequate or inaccurate. The authors conclude that interventions are needed to enhance the quality of handoff communication in community pharmacy settings to prevent dispensing errors.
Journal Article > Review
A systematic review of the prevalence and types of adverse events in interfacility critical care transfers by paramedics.
Alabdali A, Fisher JD, Trivedy C, Lilford RJ. Air Med J. 2017;36:116-121.
Interfacility transport of critically ill patients may be performed by physician-led teams or by paramedics without direct physician involvement. This systematic review attempted to determine if transport by paramedics alone was safe for patients, but researchers found only a small number of studies with limited characterization of the types of adverse events encountered in this situation.
Cases & Commentaries
Correct Treatment Plan for Incorrect Diagnosis: A Pharmacist Intervention
- Web M&M
Scott D. Nelson, PharmD, MS; March 2017
Although meningitis and neurosyphilis were ruled out for a woman presenting with a headache and blurry vision, blood tests returned indicating latent (inactive) syphilis. Due to a history of penicillin allergy, the patient was sent for testing for penicillin sensitivity, which was negative. The allergist placed orders for neurosyphilis treatment—a far higher penicillin dose than needed to treat latent syphilis, and a treatment regimen that would have required hospitalization. Upon review, the pharmacist saw that neurosyphilis had been ruled out, contacted the allergist, and the treatment plan was corrected.
Journal Article > Study
Blood bank specimen mislabeling: a College of American Pathologists Q-Probes study of 41,333 blood bank specimens in 30 institutions.
Novis DA, Lindholm PF, Ramsey G, Alcorn KW, Souers RJ, Blond B. Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2017;141:255-259.
The rate of mislabeled blood samples in hospital laboratories did not improve significantly between 2007 and 2015, despite widespread implementation of barcoding and other safety methods during that time period. An error associated with a mislabeled blood sample is discussed in a past WebM&M commentary.
Cases & Commentaries
Refused Medication Error
- Web M&M
Mary Foley, PhD, RN; February 2017
A man with end-stage renal disease was admitted with acute renal failure and mental status changes. The patient refused to take his lactulose owing to loose stools. Although nursing staff noted the refusal in the medical record, they did not inform his primary team. When the patient became more confused, a nurse alerted the team but did not describe the missed doses of lactulose. The patient continued to decline and was transferred to the ICU.
Journal Article > Study
Electronic detection of delayed test result follow-up in patients with hypothyroidism.
Meyer AND, Murphy DR, Al-Mutairi A, et al. J Gen Intern Med. 2017;32:753-759.
Trigger tools facilitate identification of adverse events. In this retrospective medical record review study, investigators found that an automated trigger successfully identified delayed follow-up of laboratory thyroid testing among patients with hypothyroidism, with a positive predictive value of 60%. The authors suggest that this trigger approach could be used to detect and ameliorate follow-up delays in real time.
Journal Article > Review
Year-end resident clinic handoffs: narrative review and recommendations for improvement.
Pincavage AT, Donnelly MJ, Young JQ, Arora VM. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2017;43:71-79.
Year-end handoffs in residency training settings are a known patient safety risk. This narrative review found that several practices can enhance the safety of year-end transitions, including standardizing written and verbal signout for high-risk patients and enhancing attending-level supervision.
Journal Article > Study
Improving patient safety: avoiding unread imaging exams in the National VA enterprise electronic health record.
Bastawrous S, Carney B. J Digit Imaging. 2017;30:309-313.
Inadequate test result management is known to contribute to missed and delayed diagnosis. This Veterans Affairs study found that 0.17% of radiologic studies were not evaluated by radiologists. The study team identified several technical and process problems that contributed to these unread studies. They were able to address the issues to ensure all studies were read.
Journal Article > Commentary
A QI initiative: implementing a patient handoff checklist for pediatric hospitalist attendings.
Lo HY, Mullan PC, Lye C, Gordon M, Patel B, Vachani J. BMJ Qual Improv Rep. 2016;5:u212920.w5661.
Patient handoffs are vulnerable to errors of omission. This quality improvement project designed and implemented a checklist as a way to standardize the process of pediatric handoffs. The program found the tool to be effective in uncovering problems and physicians felt the checklist supported situational awareness and patient safety.
Cases & Commentaries
Continuity Errors in Resident Clinic
- Web M&M
Eric Warm, MD; November 2016
After a motor vehicle collision, a patient with headaches and difficulty concentrating visited the internal medicine clinic. The covering resident diagnosed postconcussive syndrome and prescribed amitriptyline. The patient returned several days later with persistent symptoms. She saw a different resident, who ordered an MRI and referred her to neurology but mistakenly made the referral to the neuromuscular, rather than headache, clinic. With continued severe headaches, the patient returned a third time and saw her primary resident provider, who referred her to the correct neurology clinic.
Journal Article > Commentary
Handoffs: transitions of care for children in the emergency department.
American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine; American College of Emergency Physicians Pediatric Emergency Medicine Committee; Emergency Nurses Association Pediatric Committee. Pediatrics. 2016;138:e20162680.
Improvement efforts have focused on care transitions, which are known to be vulnerable to communication failures. This guideline provides recommendations for ensuring handoffs are performed in pediatric emergency care and suggests adherence to standard communication methods, coupled with effective training on the use of those tools, can improve the safety of transitions.
Journal Article > Review
Factors influencing patient safety during postoperative handover.
Rose M, Newman SD. AANA J. 2016;84:329-338.
Patient handoffs between care teams are vulnerable to error. This scoping review explored the literature to identify factors that affect the safety of handoffs from anesthesia providers to the postanesthesia care unit. Individual communication styles, team dynamics, and policy were described as elements that influence information transfers. A past PSNet perspective discussed the importance of safe inpatient handovers.
Cases & Commentaries
Lapse in Antibiotics Leads to Sepsis
- Web M&M
Mitchell Levy, MD; October 2016
Administered antibiotics in the emergency department and rushed to the operating room for emergent cesarean delivery, a pregnant woman was found to have an infection of the amniotic sac. After delivery, she was transferred to the hospital floor without a continuation order for antibiotics. Within 24 hours, the inpatient team realized she had developed septic shock.
Cases & Commentaries
Unintended Consequences of CPOE
- Spotlight Case
- CME/CEU
- Web M&M
Robert L. Wears, MD, PhD; October 2016
While attempting to order a CT scan with only oral contrast for a patient with poor kidney function, an intern ordering a CT for the first time selected "with contrast" from the list, not realizing that meant both oral and intravenous contrast. The patient developed contrast nephropathy.
