Medication Error Statistics Uk
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Medication Errors Cost The Nhs Up To £2.5bn A Year
formulations for patients with dysphagia 23 AUG 2016 15:58 Advanced Pharmacy Framework and Foundation programme We have mapped many of our learning resources to the RPS Faculty's Advanced Practice Framework and Foundation programme. To find relevant articles please visit here to pick a cluster. Opinion Editorial Comment Q&A Books and arts Obituary Correspondence Blogs Ongoing debates Insight Latest views Defining clinical pharmacy: a new paradigm 19 OCT 2016 12:16 NHS England CEO should not use derogatory language about pharmacy to justify funding cuts 14 OCT 2016 15:59 Q&A: From training surgeons in Ireland to providing healthcare education internationally 7 OCT 2016 10:41 Frank P Palopoli (1922–2016) 27 SEP 2016 11:50 Pharmacists should be trained to become clinical scientists, rather than researchers in pharmacy 22 SEP 2016 14:07 Time to redefine pharmacy research 14 SEP 2016 16:37 Research Perspective article Review article Research article Latest Evaluating a point-of-care C-reactive protein test to support antibiotic prescribing decisions in a general practice 12 OCT 2016 17:03 Cardiovascular side effects of cancer treatments 8 SEP 2016 15:00 Assessing the impact of a targeted pharmacist-led anticoagulant review clinic 16 AUG 2016 0:00 Allergic rhinitis: impact, diagnosis, treatment
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Npsa Medication Errors
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are building you a better website. You might be interested to see the new look here, and let http://www.hscic.gov.uk/catalogue/PUB11094 us know what you think. Home NHS Outcomes Framework Indicators - https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2013/jun/21/jeremy-hunt-nhs-errors-patients June 2013 release 13:30 October 20, 2016 - 09:30 June 27, 2013 Publication date: June 27, 2013 Return to Find data Summary The NHS Outcomes Framework indicators form part of the NHS Outcomes Framework, which: provides national-level accountability for the outcomes the NHS medication error delivers. drives transparency, quality improvement and outcome measurement throughout the NHS. This release includes new data for the following indicators: 1a – Potential years of life lost (PYLL) to causes considered amenable to healthcare 1.6.i – Infant mortality 1.6.ii – Neonatal mortality and stillbirths 2.6.i – Estimated diagnosis rate for people with dementia 4b – medication error statistics Patient experience of hospital care 4.2 – Responsiveness to in-patients’ personal needs 5a – Patient safety incidents reported 5b – Safety incidents involving severe harm or death 5.4 – Incidence of medication errors causing serious harm Data, along with indicator specifications providing details of indicator construction, data quality, statistical methods and interpretation considerations, can be accessed by visiting the HSCIC's Indicator Portal . Key facts Indicator 1a, the Potential years of life lost (PYLL) rates for England are 2,325 and 1,844 per 100,000 population for males and females respectively in 2011. Both have fallen from the 2010 figures (from 2,461 for males and 1,916 for females). Infant mortality (indicator 1.6.i) was unchanged between 2010 and 2011 staying at 4.2 per 1,000 births. Neonatal mortality and stillbirths rose from 8.0 to 8.2 per 1,000 births in the same time period. Patient experience of hospital care (indicator 4b) rose from 75.6 to 76.5 (out of 100) between the 2011/12 and 2012/13 surveys. Resp
the UK edition switch to the US edition switch to the AU edition International switch to the UK edition switch to the US edition switch to the Australia edition The Guardian home home UK world sport football opinion culture business lifestyle fashion environment tech travel browse all sections close Jeremy Hunt Jeremy Hunt: NHS errors mean eight patients die a day Health secretary attacks lapses in safety at hospitals and clinics in light of CQC, Mid Staffs and Morecambe Bay scandals Jeremy Hunt (r) visits University College hospital, prior to his speech on the NHS. Photograph: Getty Images Denis Campbell, health correspondent Friday 21 June 2013 11.03 BST Last modified on Tuesday 19 July 2016 17.09 BST Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share via Email Share on LinkedIn Share on Google+ Share on WhatsApp Share on Messenger This article is 3 years old Three thousand patients a year – eight a day – die because of lapses in safety in the NHS, where errors are so common that people have become conditioned to the thought of patient harm, the health secretary has said. In a strongly worded attack on how the NHS treats patients, Jeremy Hunt said appalling failures in care such as those at Stafford hospital and in the Morecambe Bay scandal exposed this week showed that unacceptable medical practice was tolerated. The NHS failed too many times in the vital area of safety, Hunt claimed. In a speech on patient safety two days after the Care Quality Commission was revealed to have suppressed a highly critical internal report on its handling of baby deaths at Furness hospital in Cumbria, the health secretary said: "In the wake of Mid Staffs, Morecambe Bay and many other shocking lapses in care, we must ask ourselves whether we, along with other countries, have become so numbed to the inevitability of patient harm that we accept the unacceptable. "That grim fatalism about the statistics has blunted the anger that we should feel about every single individual we let down, anger that should be the fuel of an uncompromising determination to put things right. It is time for a major rethink," Hunt said. Patients whose safety was compromised while receiving care represented a tiny proportion of all those treated, the health secretary said, but still about 500,000 patients were harmed and 3,000 died each year as a direct result of safety failings. "The NHS sees getting on for