Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare
  • eNewsletter Signup
  • Shop
  • Advertise
  • News & Analysis
    • All Topics
    • Patient Safety
    • Quality Improvement
    • Medication Safety
    • Infection Control
    • Patients as Partners
    • Accreditation & Regulation
    • Technology
    • Risk Management
    • Team Training
    • Leadership
    • Workplace Safety
    • Environment and Facilities
    • ACA
    • Population Health
    • COVID-19
    • Caregiver Burnout
    • Workplace Conflicts
    • Nursing
    • Telehealth
  • Podcasts
  • Resources
    • All Resources
    • Webinars
    • Videos
    • Whitepapers
    • Forms & Tools
    • HRM Week
    • IP Week
    • Nurses Week
    • PS Week
  • Innovation Awards
    • PSQH Innovation Awards
    • Previous Winners
    • Awards Sponsorship
  • About
    • Mission Statement
    • Editorial Advisory Board
    • Authors
    • Partners
    • Sponsorship
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe
  • News
  • All Categories
  • All Categories
  • Patient Safety
  • Quality Improvement
  • Medication Safety
  • Infection Control
  • Patients as Partners
  • Accreditation & Regulation
  • Technology
  • Risk Management
  • Team Training
  • Leadership
  • Workplace Safety
  • Environment and Facilities
  • ACA
  • Population Health
  • COVID-19
  • Caregiver Burnout
  • Workplace Conflicts
  • Nursing
  • Telehealth
  • Cybersecurity
  • Health Equity
  • Clinical care
  • Behavioral Health
  • Patient Satisfaction
  • Postacute Care
  • Pain Management
  • Patient Experience
  • PSQH Innovation Awards
  • Workplace Violence
  • AI
  • Home health
  • Laboratory Care
  • Sustainability
  • Patient-Centered Care
  • Mental Health
  • Long-Term Care
  • Staff Retention
  • Infection Prevention
  • Value-Based Care
  • Ambulatory Care
  • Supply Chain
  • Scope of Practice

Custom Search

Uncategorized

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.

Read More »
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.

Read More »
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.

Read More »
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.

Read More »
Uncategorized

Technology & Quality: Malpractice Reform Only with Incentives

March 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

The current medical malpractice environment does little if anything to encourage quality care and enhance safety, and tort reform, as espoused by government leaders, insurance company executives, and some physicians,…

Read More »
Uncategorized

Simulation Learning: Advancing Medical Education and Patient Safety through Simulation Learning

March 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Medical education has traditionally relied on training with real patients in actual clinical settings. While hands-on, experiential learning is indispensable, medical educators are increasingly concerned about, and committed to, the safety of patients.

Read More »
Uncategorized

Quality Metric – Proceedings from the Quality Colloquium: Implementing Evidence-Based Guidelines and Reporting Results Through a Quality Metric

March 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Although it is generally acknowledged that evidence-based medicine (EBM) reflects expert consensus about the standard of care in specific disease processes, implementing guidelines that incorporate EBM meets with a great deal of resistance.

Read More »
Uncategorized

The Patient in Patient Safety

March 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Five years after the Institute of Medicine (IOM) issued its report To Err Is Human (1999) with its all-too-familiar statistics of medical errors in hospitals, little has changed.

Read More »
Uncategorized

Error Reduction – Stop The Noise: Reduce Errors by Creating a Quieter Hospital Environment

March 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

In the typical hospital environment, sounds of beepers, alarms, machines, telephones, and voices are considered “usual and customary” — normal to those who work there and those who watch the television show “ER.”

Read More »
Uncategorized

MEDDIC-MS: MEDDICS-MS MONITORING MEASURES

March 1, 2005 ‐ Leslie Proctor

Ambulatory care of diabetes (HbA1c and lipid profile rates)…

Read More »

Posts navigation

« 1 … 545 546 547 … 551 »

Advertisers

Advertise Here

PSQH: The Podcast

Check out our new podcast for insight and analysis about the latest patient safety and quality issues!

 

BLR Footer Logo
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • About Us
  • Sponsorship
  • Contact Us
  • Do Not Sell My Information
PSQH | © 2026 HCI