FentaNYL Patch Fatalities Linked to ‘Bystander Apathy’

ISMP

FentaNYL Patch Fatalities Linked to ‘Bystander Apathy’

 

ISMP just learned about another child that died after gaining access to a transdermal fentaNYL patch. This time it was a 15-month-old boy who had been cuddling with his mother, sleeping on her chest as they both took a nap. The boy’s mother had been wearing a fentaNYL patch on her chest to treat pain associated with multiple sclerosis. When the mother awoke, she found her son unresponsive.

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News

News

ANA Issues Standards for Safe Patient Handling as Foundation for National Drive to Improve Worker Safety

 

The American Nurses Association (ANA) has published new national standards for safe patient handling and mobility that are designed to infuse a stronger culture of safety in healthcare work environments and provide a universal foundation for policies, practices, regulations, and legislation to protect patients and healthcare workers from injury.

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Partnering with Patients and Families from the Bedside to the Boardroom

Patient- and Family-Centered Care

Partnering with Patients and Families from the Bedside to the Boardroom

Imagine a setting where patients and families feel confident and comfortable asking questions, providing valuable historical information, and discussing their health priorities in open dialogue with their providers. How many adverse medical events could be avoided? How many duplicated tests could be eliminated?

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Predictive Analytics Drives Patient Engagement and Improves Care

Analytics

Predictive Analytics Drives Patient Engagement and Improves Care

 

Despite the best efforts of clinicians around the country, healthcare delivery is still largely a cottage industry. Just like the old family-run corner store, or the artist down the street who makes jewelry to sell at local craft fairs, isolated teams of wonderfully talented and committed individuals have for many years done the best they can to provide rescue care.

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Nation’s Emergency Physicians Announce List of Tests and Procedures to Question as Part of Choosing Wisely Campaign

Dedicated to reducing health care costs and improving patient care, the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) has announced a list of five tests and procedures that may not be cost effective in some situations and should prompt discussion with patients in order to both educate them and gain their agreement regarding avoidance of such tests and procedures, when appropriate. These recommendations are part of ACEP’s participation in the ABIM Foundation’s Choosing Wisely® campaign.

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Updating the Classics: Urgent Business Then and Now

From its early days in the 1980s and 90s, the patient safety movement has been blessed with high quality, accessible writing. Many of the early contributors—Michael Millenson, Bob Wachter, Atul Gawande, to name only a few—continue to contribute and update their research and reflections. Millenson and Wachter have recently commented on their earlier works and reflected on what if any progress they have seen over the years.

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