What Have We Learned About Interventions to Reduce Medical Errors?

Medical errors and adverse events are now recognized as major threats to both individual and public health worldwide. This review provides a broad perspective on major effective, established, or promising strategies to reduce medical errors and harm. Initiatives to improve safety can be conceptualiz...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annual review of public health 2010-01, Vol.31 (1), p.479-497
Hauptverfasser: WOODWARD, Helen I, MYTTON, Oliver T, LEMER, Claire, YARDLEY, Iain E, ELLIS, Benjamin M, RUTTER, Paul D, GREAVES, Felix E. C, NOBLE, Douglas J, KELLEY, Edward, WU, Albert W
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container_end_page 497
container_issue 1
container_start_page 479
container_title Annual review of public health
container_volume 31
creator WOODWARD, Helen I
MYTTON, Oliver T
LEMER, Claire
YARDLEY, Iain E
ELLIS, Benjamin M
RUTTER, Paul D
GREAVES, Felix E. C
NOBLE, Douglas J
KELLEY, Edward
WU, Albert W
description Medical errors and adverse events are now recognized as major threats to both individual and public health worldwide. This review provides a broad perspective on major effective, established, or promising strategies to reduce medical errors and harm. Initiatives to improve safety can be conceptualized as a "safety onion" with layers of protection, depending on their degree of remove from the patient. Interventions discussed include those applied at the levels of the patient (patient engagement and disclosure), the caregiver (education, teamwork, and checklists), the local workplace (culture and workplace changes), and the system (information technology and incident reporting systems). Promising interventions include forcing functions, computerized prescriber order entry with decision support, checklists, standardized handoffs and simulation training. Many of the interventions described still lack strong evidence of benefit, but this should not hold back implementation. Rather, it should spur innovation accompanied by evaluation and publication to share the results.
doi_str_mv 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.012809.103544
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source Annual Reviews Complete A-Z List; MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Allium cepa
Biological and medical sciences
Health participants
Humans
Medical Errors - prevention & control
Medical sciences
Miscellaneous
Organizational Culture
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Quality of Health Care
Safety Management - methods
title What Have We Learned About Interventions to Reduce Medical Errors?
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