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Med-Quality Hospital Case Study

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MQH is a private hospital and a major facility of Southern University Local Health District. Med-Quality Hospital (MQH) is located in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. MQH is an 800-bed facility and is the second largest medical facilities in Louisiana. MQH mission focuses on five core values including quality of service, quality of humility, quality of justice, quality of spirit, and quality of love for all life. MQH offers a variety of services from acute care to woman wellness. MQH has separate branches of services under our health care network including nephrology, outpatient surgery, in-patient and out-patient rehabilitation services. We serve 35,000 inpatients and 250,000 outpatient annually and committed to building a health community through …show more content…

For the purposes of this integrative review, an acute care setting is defined as an adult general medicine medical surgical unit. The expected outcome of the integrative review will be to discover a strategy, intervention, or protocol that can be implemented within the project leader’s healthcare organization to support a sustained change. Upon dissemination and implementation of the findings, a systematic evaluation can be conducted to determine the positive or negative outcomes of the intervention. Each year in the U.S., serious preventable medication errors occur in 3.8 million inpatient admissions and 3.3 million outpatient visits. The Institute of Medicine, in its report To Err Is Human, estimated 7,000 deaths in the U.S. each year are due to preventable medication errors. Inpatient preventable medication errors cost approximately $16.4 billion annually. Outpatient preventable medication errors cost approximately $4.2 billion annually. Dosing errors make up 37 percent of all preventable medication errors. Drug allergies or harmful drug interactions account for 11 percent of preventable medication errors. Preventable medication reconciliation errors occur in all phases of care: 22 percent during admissions, 66 percent during transitions in care and 12 percent during discharge. Approximately 100 undetected dispensing errors can occur each day as a result of the significant volume of medications

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