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Barcode Implemenation – IVs First: A New Barcode Implementation Strategy

May 1, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

The Institute of Medicine’s report To Err Is Human focused national attention on the need to improve medication safety to prevent harm (IOM, 2000). Medication errors with the greatest potential to cause significant patient harm are those involving high-risk drugs.

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Informed Consent: Comprehension is the Key

May 1, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Most hospital processes focus on trying to prevent costly medical errors after a patient begins treatment. However, there is a process that starts before patient treatment that can have an even bigger impact on patient safety and quality of care.

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View from the Hill: “Paper Kills” Should Be Healthcare’s Mantra

May 1, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

From the halls of Congress to federal government meetings and briefings, state legislatures, city halls, and workplaces across America, serious discussions are centered on healthcare.

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Inpatient Falls: Lessons from the Field

May 1, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Preventing patient falls and related injuries in acute care settings has been an elusive goal for many hospitals. Falls are a high-risk and high-cost problem (human and fiscal) for all healthcare facilities.

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Ethics Toolbox – Specialty Pharmaceuticals: Tip of the Ethical Iceberg

May 1, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

The number of specialty pharmaceuticals available for treating a wide range of chronic and degenerative diseases is growing rapidly.

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Editor’s Notebook: A Strange Alchemy

May 1, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Prague was the European center of alchemy in the Middle Ages and, in April, was the host city for a conference that featured experiments in the application of alchemy to healthcare improvement. Or so it seems in retrospect.

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The DUN Factor: The Six Factors of Communication Risk

May 1, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

The U.S., Canada, Great Britain, and most of Western Europe are increasingly multi-racial, multi-cultural, and multi-lingual.

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The DUN Factor: How Communication Complicates the Patient Safety Movement

May 1, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

The medical profession is legendary for applying linear logic and scientific method to any problem it faces, whether it is a disease or the current center of attention — patient safety.

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Uncategorized

Consumers as Partners: Building a Global Network of Consumer Partners

May 1, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

In October 2004, the World Health Organization (WHO) officially launched the World Alliance for Patient Safety (World Alliance) to raise awareness and political commitment to improve the safety of care and to facilitate the development of patient safety policy and practice in all WHO member states.

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Uncategorized

Pathologist Review: Quality, Assurance, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Patient Care

March 18, 2006 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Clinical laboratory tests and anatomic pathology diagnoses affect the vast majority of treatment decisions made by clinical physicians in nearly every medical discipline, impacting nearly every person seeking medical care.

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