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We’re Not Your Enemy: An Appeal from a Consumer to Re-imagine Tort Reform

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

If there is evidence for anything in the medico-legal research, it is that the tort system under-compensates the majority of patients and families who have experienced medical error (Brennan et al., 1991; Localio et al., 1991; Studdert et al., 2006).

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Technology and Quality – Business Intelligence: Mining for Information

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Lou Pinella, the Cubs manager, is chomping on his unlit cigarette. It is the bottom of the ninth inning, and Fenway Park is a screaming madhouse.

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Technology Implementation – Executive Primer: Solving User Adoption

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

If you introduce information technology (IT) into your organization, expect resistance. “We do not have time for this!” “It costs too much!” “We’re already doing a great job!” How many times have you heard statements like these? Perhaps, you have even said as much yourself.

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Private Health Records and the Health URL: A patient-centered care team approach to health information management

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Older, more active, more mobile, and more sophisticated healthcare consumers demand an ever more diverse healthcare team. Specialty hospitals, retail clinics, networked home care devices, house calls, health advice Web sites, and medical tourism represent the leading edge of innovation in healthcare delivery.

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EHRs, PHRs, and ePrescribing: How Do the Pieces Fit Together?

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Consider the following medical care scenarios… You are in a car accident and are transported, unconscious, to the emergency room (ER) of the local hospital.

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Medication Safety: Reconcile Those Medications!

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Medication reconciliation has been a requirement for acute care hospitals for more than a year. The regulation requires hospitals to implement a professional process to obtain and document a complete list of the patient’s active medications upon admission.

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Interoperability: How Semantic Interoperability Improves Safety and Quality

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Last fall, the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) embarked on the next phase of a plan aimed at continuing to improve the patient safety and quality of care across its network of 19 hospitals and more than 400 outpatient sites, physician practices, and other care facilities.

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View From the Hill: Public/Private Partnerships Benefit All

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Government and private industry have worked together to address policy issues throughout America’s history. For example, since the 1970s, NASA has been in the forefront of research and development in the field of telemedicine with the help of private industry.

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Uncategorized

Editor’s Notebook: Plug and Play for Patient Safety

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Most of what I hear about interoperability refers to sharing data among information systems. But in late June, I spent 3 days at a joint conference of organizations working on the interoperability of medical devices.

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Uncategorized

The Business Case for Patient Safety

July 1, 2007 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Hospitals that worry whether making care for patients safe makes them money or costs them money will never be safe.

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