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Next Steps – Patient Safety: It’s Not Just About the Technology…

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Patient safety is at the top of the agenda for hospital executives. Every hospital’s growth strategy presumes compliance with accepted medical practices and access to thorough and current patient information at every point where care is administered.

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Medication Safety – Compliance Made Easy: Understanding USP 797

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

During the 1960s, the practice of pharmacy began growing and evolving. In response to an increasing number of patient injuries due to medication delivery and sterile compounding, the industry began calling attention to safety.

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View From the Hill: The Administration Takes a Step Forward on E-Prescribing

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Many industry observers believe that electronic prescribing (e-prescribing) is one of the key steps for reaching our president’s 2004 goal of “most Americans having an electronic health record within the next decade.”

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Ethics Toolbox: Blending Ethics and Empowerment with Consumer-Driven Healthcare

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

For the past three decades, cost containment, control, efficiency, and reduction efforts have remained at the forefront of healthcare policy, overshadowing innovation, quality, and safety concerns.

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Editor’s Notebook: Proust and Patient Safety

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Can you imagine the chairs of a patient safety conference in the U.S. including a quote from Marcel Proust in the introduction to the published proceedings? Probably not,…

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Uncategorized

Consumers as Partners – Standards, Audits, and Saying I’m Sorry: An Engineer’s Family Proposes Solutions

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

I dreamed of being an engineer when I was growing up, but algebra and calculus were not my cup of tea, so I pursued a career in politics and public relations.

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Case Study: Improving Medication Safety with a Wireless, Mobile Barcode System in a Community Hospital

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Over the past few years, hospital organizations have increasingly looked to new technology solutions to improve patient safety. Barcode technology is an especially promising approach in the effort to reduce medical errors.

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Uncategorized

Medication Safety: Averting Highest-Risk Errors Is First Priority

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Not all medication errors are created equal. In efforts to improve patient safety, healthcare systems need to give first priority to averting the medication errors with the greatest potential for harm.

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Uncategorized

Technology – Getting to the Recall on Time: Improve Safety with Automated Recall Management

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

For several months in late 2001, The Johns Hopkins Hospital unknowingly used a defective bronchoscope that resulted in 2 deaths and 400 injuries.

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Uncategorized

Technology – Advancing Patient Safety in Laparoscopy: The Active Electrode Monitoring System

May 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

In the past, use of monopolar electrosurgery in open surgical procedures involved the risk of external skin injury due to an alternate return path or compromised return electrode.

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