Patient safety is a major concern for all health care providers. Two areas of safety that are relevant to my practice in an outpatient surgical center are medication errors and the electronic error reporting. The Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN) is the organization that was used to support my project. The Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) Initiative competency that was chosen for my indirect clinical project (ICP) was safety. Everyone in the health care environment wants to be kept safe. A discussion on how medication errors and the electronic error reporting affects everyone from the staff to the community will be discussed. Safety is an integral part of health care. Considering the Joint Commission (2015) believes patient safety is so important that it has dedicated and entire chapter on the subject and made it free to view. Throughout this paper safety related to medication errors and electronic error reporting will be discussed. Along with the topic of medication errors and electronic reporting will be two plans to reduce safety related events. Overall the paper will cover medication errors and their prevention with how electronic error reporting can help prevent frequent errors from occurring. It is our job as health care providers to prevent or abolish safety risks to the patient and to ourselves. Considering Ulrich and Kear (2014) show that four to eight million people are injured in the United States due to safety issues in the
The Joint Commission focuses on certain goals each year. For patient safety and positive outcomes, hospitals are required to follow certain standards. National Patient Safety Goals were established in 2002 to help identify areas of concern with patient safety. This group is made up by a panel of experts including nurses, doctors, pharmacists and many other healthcare professionals. They advise the Joint Commission on how to address these different patient safety issues. Two goals to be discussed are improving the accuracy of patient identification and medication safety. To improve patient
Many hospitals aren’t good at keeping their patients safe, while others are trying to improve and implement their safety policies every single day. Many people die every year from mistakes and errors that could have been prevented in hospital practices in the United States. It all boils down to how healthcare workers can make a difference by employing patient safety into their daily jobs. Some hospitals have hidden dangers that can
Los Angeles, Doctor and founder John McLaughlin, came up with the idea to reduce health care costs and improve patient safety
Keeping patients safe is essential in today’s health care system, but patient safety events that violate that safety are increasing each year. It was only recently, that the focus on patient safety was reinforced by a report prepared by Institute of medicine (IOM) entitled ” To err is human, building a safer health system”(Wakefield & Iliffe,2002).This report found that approx-imately 44,000 to 98,000 deaths occur each year due to medical errors and that the majority was preventable. Deaths due to medical errors exceed deaths due to many other causes such as like HIV infections, breast cancer and even traffic accidents (Wakefield & Iliffe, 2002). After this IOM reports, President Clinton established quality interagency
Errors pervade in our lives whether it is our home, in our workplace, or in our society. The effects of healthcare errors have impacted all our lives either directly or indirectly. Patient safety and quality care are at the core of healthcare system which strongly depends upon nurses. “To achieve goals in patient safety and quality, thereby improve healthcare, nurses must assume the leadership role. Nurses need to ensure that they and other healthcare providers center healthcare on patients and their families. Even though the quality and safety of healthcare is heavily influenced by the complex nature
Synergy Model for Care is considered a high middle range theory as it includes concepts, self-transcendence, resilience and growth and development (McEwen & Wills, 2014 p. 239). Middle range theories were mostly derived from grand theories in order to develop a bridge to clinical practice. A high middle range theory is generalized with fewer concepts than a grand theory and applicable across specialties and different clinical settings. With high middle range theories propositions are clearly defined with testable hypothesis (McEwen & Wills, 2014, p. 74).
Medication errors are a very common problem in the healthcare world. They can be very minor errors or they can kill a patient. There have been many new systems put in place to prevent and reduce medication errors but they continue to happen. Several different factors have been looked at to prevent medication errors including computer systems, hours worked, patient to nurse ratio, and years of experience.
Patient safety is defined as the prevention of harm to patients, and is the number one priority in healthcare facilities. All healthcare facilities have policies in place to keep patients as safe as possible. These policies can include anything from preventing infection to education. Every facility will have different policies in place, thus all patient safety policies will emphasize a culture of safety in a suitable environment. One policy that is of concern is the minimum number of nurses staffed on a unit at any given time, or the nurse to patient ratio. Every state and every
Most patients would like to think that safety is a major priority at the hospital they are visiting. They would like to believe that the hospital actively engages in practices that should nearly diminish any possibility for an accident or mistake to occur. However, the premise of patient safety is relatively new. Medical errors remain a sensitive topic with patients, physicians, and hospital administrators. Physicians and other medical personnel are very reluctant to communicate information about any form of medical error. They feel that admitting to any sort of wrongdoing will have negative effects with peers and may open up the potential for legal action. The
Patient safety within nursing field is an extremely vital component when providing extraordinary care to patients. Patient safety on a daily basis can be an extremely difficult task to maintain, especially when there are medical errors and setbacks. According to the American Nurses Association, a medical error is defined as a planned sequence of mental or physical activities that fails to achieve to the intended outcome, and when this failure cannot be attributed to some chance intervention or occurrence.
Patient safety is vital in the practice of medicine. In medical laboratory science, we may not have a direct contact with the patient, but every duty we perform can affect the outcome of the patient’s health. Patient safety involves being able to collect samples and follow the protocols for the test result. Accuracy in medicine may be a very high standard, but it is worth it when it comes to a patient’s life. A medical practitioner should always have the expectation not to incur more harm on the patient. A patient comes to the hospital for a solution to their problem and should not go back home with more problems. Patient safety includes interpreting results accurately, doing the right test and following protocols. The protocol for testing may be long to read, difficult to follow when you have a large workload but vital in medicine. A medical laboratory scientist should always have the code of ethics at heart to perform an error-free lab test on a patient. Shortcuts may look easy, but the result poses damage to the patient. The moment you made up your mind to be a laboratory practitioner was the when you decided to take responsibility of caring and ensured error-free for your patient.
It has been nearly fifteen years since the Institute of Medicine (IOM) published To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System (Kohn, Corrigan, & Donaldson, 2000). This brought to the forefront the issue of safety in medicine along with a proposed agenda to decrease preventable complications. Interestingly, it was a shift in focus from individuals to processes in the effort to decrease error and improve outcomes.
Issues related to a lack of patient safety have been going on for a lot of years now. Throughout the first decade of the 21st century, there has been a national emphasis on cultivating patient safety. Patient safety is a global issue, that touches countries at all levels of expansion and is one of the nation's most determined health care tests. According to the Institute of Medicine (1999), they have measured that as many as 48,000 to 88,000 people are dying in U.S. hospitals each year as the result of lapses in patient safety. Estimates of the size of the problem on this are scarce particularly in developing countries; it is likely that millions of patients worldwide could suffer disabling injuries or death every year due to unsafe medical care. Risk and safety have always been uninterruptedly been significant concerns in the hospital industry. Patient safety is a very much important part of our health care system and it really
Patient Safety. Health care professionals, as a whole, must take responsibility for establishing safe methods of care that involve preventing errors and adverse events. These methods should also establish methods of identifying and reporting errors and adverse events when they do occur (“NEW AAP POLICY STATEMENT ON PATIENT SAFETY,” 2011). Although patient safety in hospitals has substantially improved, American Academy of Pediatrics recommends expanding the focus of patient safety to ambulatory care (“NEW AAP POLICY STATEMENT ON PATIENT SAFETY,” 2011). American Academy of Pediatrics
Safety is a major concern worldwide, especially in the healthcare facilities. Patient safety is the responsibility of all healthcare professionals (Vaismoradi, Jordan, & Kangasniemi, 2015). You see different safety implementations taken place in the different healthcare facilities, rather it involves medication administration, transferring a patient, preventing the spread of diseases, and or just correctly identifying the patient through patient participation and education. However, Studies have been done, that show safety outcomes are better met with the active participation of the patient (Vaismoradi et al., 2015). As a healthcare professional, you need to be aware of the different issues that might affect a patient safety and participation in safety measures, like their environment or mobility (Kenny, 2016). A majority of individuals, have had a family member or someone they know, that has been in a healthcare facility and witnessed a wide variety of safety implementations taken place or being neglected.