viernes, 1 de mayo de 2015

AHRQ Patient Safety Network ► Elucidating reasons for resident underutilization of electronic adverse event reporting.

AHRQ Patient Safety Network

PSNet header image



Elucidating reasons for resident underutilization of electronic adverse event reporting.

Hatoun J, Suen W, Liu C, et al. Am J Med Qual. 2015 Mar 9; [Epub ahead of print].

This survey study found that most resident physicians did not use incident reporting systems for adverse events in which they were involved, often because they did not know what or how to report. These results highlight the shortcomings of voluntary reporting for patient safety.

PubMed citation icon indicating hyperlink to external website
Available at icon indicating hyperlink to external website





Related Resources
STUDY

A novel approach to increase residents' involvement in reporting adverse events.

Scott DR, Weimer M, English C, et al. Acad Med. 2011;86:742-746.

STUDY

Residency schedule, burnout and patient care among first-year residents.

Block L, Wu AW, Feldman L, Yeh HC, Desai SV. Postgrad Med J. 2013;89:495-500.

STUDY

Development, implementation, and dissemination of the I-PASS Handoff Curriculum: a multisite educational intervention to improve patient handoffs.

Starmer AJ, O'Toole JK, Rosenbluth G, et al; I-PASS Study Education Executive Committee. Acad Med. 2014;89:876-884.

STUDY

Effects of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education duty hour limits on sleep, work hours, and safety.

Landrigan CP, Fahrenkopf AM, Lewin D, et al. Pediatrics. 2008;122:250-258. 

View all related resources...

No hay comentarios: