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Approach to Improving Safety
Safety Target
Error Types
- Active Errors
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Search results for "Active Errors"
- Active Errors
- Bedside Procedures
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Journal Article > Study
Nurses' perceived skills and attitudes about updated safety concepts: impact on medication administration errors and practices.
Armstrong GE, Dietrich M, Norman L, Barnsteiner J, Mion L. J Nurs Care Qual. 2017;32:226-233.
Medication administration errors are common and account for a significant fraction of medication errors. This study sought to assess how bedside nurses' reported attitudes and skills with safety practices affect medication administration errors. Researchers determined that system, local, and individual bedside nurse factors contribute to medication administration errors.
Cases & Commentaries
No BP During NIBP
- Web M&M
Matthias Görges, PhD, and J. Mark Ansermino, MBBCh, MSc; September 2014
A man with atrial fibrillation underwent ablation in the catheterization laboratory under general endotracheal anesthesia. The patient was extremely stable during the 7-hour procedure with vital signs hardly changing over time. Inadvertently, the noninvasive blood pressure measurement stopped recording for 1 hour but went unnoticed. After the error was discovered, the case continued without any problems and the patient was discharged home the next day as planned.
Cases & Commentaries
Too Much, Too Fast
- Web M&M
Delphine Tuot, MDCM, MAS; September 2014
A patient with ALS was hospitalized with presumed pneumonia and sepsis. Although he was treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics and fluid resuscitation, additional potassium was administered due to his potassium level remaining low. The patient went into cardiac arrest and resuscitation attempts were unsuccessful.
Journal Article > Commentary
New enteral connectors: raising awareness.
Guenter P. Nutr Clin Pract. 2014;29:612-614.
Redesigning tubing connectors according to new ISO standards has the potential to reduce tubing misconnections. This commentary provides information about changes to enteral connectors to prepare clinicians to use the new devices in their organizations.
Cases & Commentaries
Benefits vs. Risks of Intraosseous Vascular Access
- Web M&M
Raymond L. Fowler, MD, and Melanie J. Lippmann, MD; July-August 2014
During a code blue, an intraosseous line was placed in the left tibia of an elderly woman after several unsuccessful attempts to obtain peripheral venous access. Following chest compressions and advanced cardiovascular life support protocol, spontaneous circulation returned and the patient was transferred to the intensive care unit. A few hours later, the left leg was dusky purple with sluggish distal pulses.
Cases & Commentaries
Liver Biopsy: Proceed With Caution
- Web M&M
Don C. Rockey, MD; July-August 2014
Presenting with jaundice and epigastric pain, a woman with a history of multiple malignancies was admitted directly for an ultrasound-guided liver biopsy. After the procedure, the patient had low blood pressure and complained of new abdominal pain, which worsened over the next 2 hours. The bedside nurse soon found the patient unresponsive.
Journal Article > Study
Why don't nurses consistently take patient respiratory rates?
Ansell H, Meyer A, Thompson S. Br J Nurs. 2014;23:414-418.
Basic nursing care, such as measuring and recording vital signs, is often left undone. This qualitative study found that nurses frequently fail to accurately record patients' respiratory rates due to more urgent work tasks, confirming findings from prior studies.
Journal Article > Study
Training induces cognitive bias: the case of a simulation-based emergency airway curriculum.
Park CS, Stojiljkovic L, Milicic B, Lin BF, Dror IE. Simul Healthc. 2014;9:85-93.
This educational study found that anesthesiology residents were more likely to initiate an airway technique for which they had received simulation training, even if another technique (for which they received didactic training) would have been more appropriate. This finding demonstrates how training may inadvertently introduce cognitive bias.
Cases & Commentaries
New Oral Anticoagulants
- Spotlight Case
- Web M&M
Margaret C. Fang, MD, MPH; December 2013
Two days after knee replacement surgery, a woman with a history of deep venous thrombosis receiving pain control via epidural catheter was restarted on her outpatient dose of rivaroxaban (a newer oral anticoagulant). Although the pain service fellow scanned the medication list for traditional anticoagulants, he did not notice the patient was taking rivaroxaban before removing the epidural catheter, placing the patient at very high risk for bleeding.
Journal Article > Commentary
Residual anaesthesia drugs in intravenous lines—a silent threat?
Bowman S, Raghavan K, Walker IA. Anaesthesia. 2013;68:557-561.
This commentary examines how residual medications in intravenous lines can harm patients and emphasizes the need for these incidents to be reported.
Cases & Commentaries
The Unfamiliar Catheter
- Web M&M
Sonia C. Swayze, RN, MA, and Angela James, RN, BSN; March 2013
While drawing labs on a woman admitted after a lung transplant, a nurse failed to clamp the patient's large-bore central line, allowing air to enter the catheter. The patient suffered a cerebral air embolism and was transferred to the ICU for several days.
Cases & Commentaries
CVC Placement: Speak Now or Do Not Use the Line
- Web M&M
Mark Ault, MD, and Bradley Rosen, MD, MBA; February 2013
A woman found unresponsive at home presented to the ED via ambulance. The cardiology team used the central line placed during resuscitation to deliver medications and fluids during pacemaker insertion. Hours later, a chest radiograph showed whiteout of the right lung, and clinicians realized that the tip of the line was actually within the lung.
Journal Article > Study
Improving resident engagement in quality improvement and patient safety initiatives at the bedside: the Advocate for Clinical Education (ACE).
Schleyer AM, Best JA, McIntyre LK, Ehrmantraut R, Calver P, Goss JR. Am J Med Qual. 2013;28:243-249.
An advocate for clinical education (a nurse who rounded with medicine and surgery teams) provided team-specific feedback on patient safety measures to residents and attending physicians based on direct observation of clinical care. The feedback was well received by physicians and was associated with some improvement in hand hygiene practices.
Journal Article > Study
Patient perceptions of missed nursing care.
Kalisch BJ, McLaughlin M, Dabney BW. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2012;38:161-167.
Missed nursing care (failure to perform required patient care elements) is surprisingly common. This qualitative study found that patients were able to reliably identify episodes of missed nursing care and their perceptions correlated with nurses' opinions.
Cases & Commentaries
Are We Pushing Graduate Nurses Too Fast?
- Web M&M
Nancy Spector, PhD, RN ; March 2011
While caring for a complex patient in the surgical intensive care unit, a nurse incorrectly set up the continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) machine, raising questions about how new nurses should be trained in high-risk procedures.
Cases & Commentaries
Where's the Feeding Tube?
- Web M&M
Norma A. Metheny, RN, PhD; Kathleen L. Meert, MD; September 2008
A boy was receiving enteral feedings while recovering from a traumatic brain injury. The nasojejunal tube migrated to the gastric area, and the patient developed pneumonia, likely due to aspiration.
Journal Article > Study
Variability in the concentrations of intravenous drug infusions prepared in a critical care unit.
Wheeler DW, Degnan BA, Sehmi JS, et al. Intensive Care Med. 2008;34:1441-1447.
This study found that errors frequently occurred when intravenous medications were prepared at the bedside, resulting in patients receiving incorrect doses of medications.
Cases & Commentaries
Physical Diagnosis: A Lost Art?
- Spotlight Case
- Web M&M
George R. Thompson III, MD, and Abraham Verghese, MD; August 2006
A man with paraplegia was admitted to the hospital, but the admitting physician, night float resident, and daytime team all "deferred" examination of the genital area. The patient was later discovered to have life-threatening necrotizing fasciitis of this area.
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Forgotten but not gone: tourniquets left on patients.
PA-PSRS Patient Saf Advis. June 2005;2:19-21.
This advisory from the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Reporting System discusses 125 reports of tourniquets being inappropriately left on patients and provides strategies to reduce these occurrences.
Journal Article > Study
Normal neurologic and developmental outcome after an accidental intravenous infusion of expressed breast milk in a neonate.
Ryan CA, Mohammad I, Murphy B. Pediatrics. 2006;117:236-238.
The authors present a case study of accidental intravenous breast milk administration to a premature infant. They discuss using both root cause analysis and a professional network to illustrate the value of finding systemic contributions to rare but potentially dangerous mistakes.
