Medication Error Reporting Nursing Care Quality
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Consequences Of Medication Errors For Nurses
and its Barriers and Facilitators among NursesSnor Bayazidi, 1 Yadolah Zarezadeh, 2 Vahid Zamanzadeh, 1 ,* and Kobra Parvan 1 1Department of Nursing, Faculty of Nursing
Medication Error Incident Report Sample
and Midwifery, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, Iran2Medical Education Development Center, Kurdistan University of Medical Sciences, Sanandaj, Iran*Corresponding Author: Vahid Zamanzadeh (PhD), E-mail:ri.ca.demzbt@hedaznamaz This article resulted from an MSc thesis at Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, International Branch of Aras, No: 181039. Author information ► Article notes ► Copyright and medical error reporting system License information ►Received 2012 Jun 9; Accepted 2012 Jul 21.Copyright © 2012 by Tabriz University of Medical SciencesThis article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Introduction: Medication errors are among the most prevalent medical errors leading to morbidity and mortality. Effective prevention of this type of errors depends on the presence of a well-organized reporting system. The purpose of this study was to explore medication error reporting rate and its barriers and facilitators among nurses in teaching hospitals of Urmia University of Medical Sciences(Iran). Methods: In a descriptive study in 2011, 733 nurses working in Urmia teaching hospitals were included. Data was collected using a questionnaire based on Haddon matrix. The questionnaire consisted of three items about medication error reporting rate, eight items on barriers of reporting, and seven items on facilitators of reporting. The collected data was analyzed by descriptive statistics in SPSS14 . Results:The rate of report
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Disclosure Of Medical Errors To Patients
CommentView More Ethics Code of EthicsEthics Position StatementsAbout The CenterEthics Topics reporting medication errors and ArticlesSafetyPersonalized MedicineEnd of Life IssuesView More Health & Safety Healthy Nurse, Healthy Nation™Healthy Work Environment Policy medication error what to do after & Advocacy Professional Issues PanelsPositions and ResolutionsCongress and Federal AgenciesPublic ReportingState Government AffairsANA PACTake ActionView More Member Benefits ANA and State Member BenefitsANA Personal BenefitsFactsheets and ResourcesProfessional ToolsANA Periodicals https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4161082/ Conferences 2017 ANA Annual Conference Join » Home >Practice >Nursing Quality >Advocacy >Institute for Healthcare Improvement >Get Involved >Near Misses Near Misses ^ m d Report Near Misses Adverse Drug Events The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) refers to adverse drug events (ADEs) as injuries attributable to the use of medications (1). Hospitalized patients who experience an http://www.nursingworld.org/MainMenuCategories/ThePracticeofProfessionalNursing/PatientSafetyQuality/Advocacy/IHCI/GetInvolved/NearMisses.html ADE are almost twice as likely to die as those without an ADE (2). Death certificate data showed that almost 1,200 hospital deaths in 1993 were due to medication errors. In addition, the incidence of such deaths had more than doubled since 1983 (3). Medication errors are one of the leading causes of injury to hospital patients, and chart reviews reveal that over half of all hospital medication errors occur at the interfaces of care (4). ADEs account for 6.3% of malpractice claims (5). A study of pediatric cancer patients revealed variances between medication orders and information from patient/guardian or prescription labels on the container 30% of the time (6). A multidisciplinary check of medication orders, also for pediatric cancer patients, revealed that 42% of the orders being reviewed needed to be changed (7). According to one estimate, in any given week four out of every five U.S. adults will use prescription medicines, over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, or dietary supplements of some sort, and nearly one-third of adults will ta
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