Alternative Dispute Resolution in Healthcare. A Prescription for Increasing Disclosure and Improving Patient Safety
Patient safety and the prevention of medical errors is a mutual goal sought by all in healthcare — patients, providers, and lawyers.
New Tools for MRI Safety Ferromagnetically Naked
July / August 2008 New Tools for MRI Safety Ferromagnetically Naked By Tobias Gilk Photo courtesy of Metrasens Ltd. The recent Joint Commission Sentinel Event Alert #38 on MRI accidents, last year’s American College of Radiology “ACR Guidance Document for Safe MR Practices: 2007” (Kanal et al., 2007), and a string of MRI … Continued
Maintaining Compliance with Joint Commission Medication Management Standard
The Joint Commission’s standards for Medication Management (MM) are among the most rigorous and challenging for an organization to implement.
Medical Devices: Human Factors Design and FDA Regulation
Companies that produce medical devices such as breast implants and implantable defibrillators now have federal protection against lawsuits arising from deaths or injuries associated with their products as long as the product has been approved for use by the FDA.
Strategies for Success: Clinical HIT Implementation
Healthcare organizations implement clinical healthcare information technology (HIT) to improve the quality of care, enhance patient safety, and eliminate inefficiencies in order to reduce the cost of care.
View from the Hill: ONC’s Road Map for National Health IT
For decades, public and private healthcare systems in the United States have operated with processes and management styles that would have bankrupted most industries years ago.
Haptics for Touch-Enabled Simulation and Training
Clinicians often think of simulations as taking place on mannequins so that staff members can practice repeatedly until they achieve mastery.
Editor’s Notebook: A Quotation with a Life of Its Own
I don’t recall exactly when I first heard or read Dr. Paul Batalden’s observation, “Every system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets,” which provided me with an important Aha! moment as I began to learn about patient safety and quality in healthcare.
AHRQ: Progress Slows in Improving Patient Safety for All Populations
Ever since the Institute of Medicine reported that up to 98,000 Americans die each year as the result of medical errors (2000) and observed that our healthcare system suffers from a “chasm” between consistent, high-quality care that is based on the best scientific knowledge available and the care many actually receive (2001), there has been renewed vigor in reducing variation and improving healthcare for all Americans.
Safety and Satisfaction: Where are the Connections?
Patient safety and patient satisfaction should go hand-in-hand. Hospitals ought to be able to provide care that is safe and meets or exceeds patient expectations for service quality.