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Patient Safety: A Brief Summary |
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In 2000, the Institute of Medicine, an arm of
the National Academies of Science, issued its bellwether report, "To Err Is
Human," and the concept of medical errors and patient safety became a
national cause celebre. That publication estimated that 98,000 people die in
any given year from medical errors that occur in hospitals. Other reports in
the medical literature estimate that as many as 180,000 deaths occur in the
United States each year due to errors in medical care, many of which are
preventable.
Patient safety advocates and
researchers argue that only by viewing the health care continuum as a system
can truly meaningful improvements be made. These advocates argue that a systems
approach that emphasizes prevention, not punishment is the best method to
accomplish this goal. Other high-risk industries/companies such as airlines and
nuclear power have used this approach to accomplish safety.
To make the
prevention effort effective, standardized methods of gathering and analyzing
data from the field that allow the formation of the most accurate picture
possible are being introduced to the health care setting. Many health care
organizations have developed teams that review data to determine problems,
formulate solutions, test, implement, and measure outcomes in order to improve
patient safety. Findings from the teams are shared nation-wide. These
organizations follow principals that presume that people do not come to work to
do a bad job or make an error, but given the right set of circumstances any
provider can make a mistake. They view as "the easy answer" that it was
someones fault, and focus on answering what they view as the "tougher
question" as to why the error occurred. It is seldom a single reason. Through
understanding the real underlying causes organizations believe they can better
position ourselves to prevent future occurrences.
Nationally,
accrediting, teaching and other organizations are amassing databases of errors,
called "sentinel events" or "medical errors" in order to assist organizations
in taking advantage of the experience of others and advocating patient safety
systems in areas where the most risk seems to exist.
Establishing a
culture of safety where people are able to report both adverse events and close
calls without fear of punishment is viewed by many as the the key to creating
patient safety. But where does this leave licensing boards, whose focus is on
assessing and punishing individual providers? How do they fit into the patient
safety scheme?
Click here to learn more about CAC
and patient safety. Click here to visit our Patient Safety
links. |
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