Human Error In Emergency Medicine
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GuidesLive WebinarsOn-Demand WebinarsLibrariesClinicalAll ProductsPublicationsStudy GuidesLive WebinarsOn-Demand WebinarsMy AccountMy SubscriptionsMy ContentMy OrdersMy CME/CEMy Transcript Home » Emergency Medicine Specialty Reports: The Systems Approach https://www.ahcmedia.com/articles/2101-emergency-medicine-specialty-reports-the-systems-approach-to-error-reduction-in-the-emergency-department to Error Reduction in the Emergency Department Emergency https://www.researchgate.net/publication/12841031_Human_Error_in_Emergency_Medicine Medicine Specialty Reports: The Systems Approach to Error Reduction in the Emergency Department December 12, 2004 No Comments Reprints Share Related Articles Emergency Medicine Specialty Reports: When Intimate Partner Violence Presents in the Emergency Department human error Emergency Medicine Specialty Reports: Medical Malpractice and High-Risk Patients in the Emergency Department Supplement: Emergency Medicine Specialty Reports: Medication Error Prevention Related Products Hospitalist and Emergency Procedures CME course Emergency Medicine Reports with Continuing Education: Print + Online, 1 Year Subscription w/ auto renew human error in Pediatric Emergency Medicine Reports: Print + Online, 1 Year Subscription w/ auto renew Related Events Telemedicine, the Cost-Effective Alternative: CMS, TJC & DNV Standards Hospital CMS CoPs Made Easy: the Series Case Management Across the Continuum of Care: the Series The Systems Approach to Error Reduction in the Emergency Department
Author: Charles D. Callahan, PhD, MBA, Administrator, Neuromuscular, Orthopaedics, and Emergency Services, Memorial Medical Center, Springfield, IL. Peer Reviewer: Rollin J. Fairbanks, MD, Attending Physician, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY. Few topics in medicine are as divisive as medical error. Since the publication of the Institute of Medicine's report on medical errors, an enormous public and private response has called for strict emphasis on safety in every aspect of patient care. The emergency departmentRequest full-text Human Error in Emergency MedicineArticle in Annals of Emergency Medicine 34(3):370-2 · October 1999 with 15 ReadsDOI: 10.1016/S0196-0644(99)70133-2 · Source: PubMed1st Robert Wears44.13 · University of Florida2nd Lucian L LeapeAbstract[Wears RL, Leape LL: Human error in emergency medicine. Ann Emerg Med September 1999;34:370-372.]Do you want to read the rest of this article?Request full-text CitationsCitations51ReferencesReferences17Planning safe anesthesia: The role of collective resources management"However, two facts have to be emphasized. First, although anesthetists have to cope with a high level of uncertainty and variability related to the complexity and the unpredictability of the human body [7, 9], anesthesia is indeed an ultra-safe discipline [8, 35]. Second, the two anesthesia services in which the study was conducted are considered as highly competent in the domain of pediatric anesthesia. "[Show abstract] [Hide abstract] ABSTRACT: Anticipation and planning are essential steps of risk management but the mechanisms of planning behavior are incompletely understood, especially the factors including collective work. The aim of this research is to understand how anesthetists plan safe solution to perform anesthesia. A study based on interviews was conducted in two French hospitals. Data processing focused on the main decisions made by 20 anesthetists during two simulated pre-anesthetic consultation. The main decisions made have been identified and the decision criteria have been analyzed. To ensure patient safety, all anesthetists do not plan the same solution. The rejection or the selection of solutions by each physician rests on two types of criteria: the assessment of risks for the patient and the assessment of resources available to handle the situation. For the latter, the knowledge on the individual skills of each and the adoption of "local benchmark practices" play an essential role. Ultra safe performance in highly variable systems cannot be achieved only through standardization but also through the possibility and ability of the subjects to adapt their practices to their own skills and to that of their colleagues. The conditions for the development of this "adaptative safety" are discussed.Article · Aug 2012 Lucie CuvelierPierre FalzonJean-Claude Granry+1 more author ...Gilles OrliaguetReadBarriers to and Incentives for Safety Event Reporting in Emergency Departments"In Canada, 7.5% of hospital admissions are associated with an adverse event, over a third of which are retrospectively deemed preventable (Baker et al. 2004). Emergenc