Literature DB >> 15638340

Reducing medical errors through better documentation.

Marie Edwards1, Jackie Moczygemba.   

Abstract

Preventable medical errors occur with alarming frequency in US hospitals. Questions to address include what is a medical error, what errors occur most often, and what solutions can health information technologies offer with better documentation. Preventable injuries caused by mismanagement of treatment happen in all areas of care. Some result from human fallibility and some from system failures. Most errors stem from a combination of the two. Examples of combination errors include wrong-site surgeries, scrambled laboratory results, medication mishaps, misidentification of patients, and equipment failures. Unavailable patient information and illegible handwriting lead to diagnosing and ordering errors. Recent technology offers viable solutions to many of these medical errors. Computer-based medical records, integration with the pharmacy, decision support software, Computerized Physician Order Entry Systems, and bar coding all offer ways to avoid tragic treatment outcomes. Persuading and training hospital staff to use the technology poses a problem, as does budgeting for the new equipment. However, the technology would prove its worth in time. The Institute of Medicine and coalition groups such as Leapfrog Group have recognized the problem that permeates the health care industry, manifests in many ways, and requires the many solutions that information technology offer.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15638340     DOI: 10.1097/00126450-200410000-00007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Care Manag (Frederick)        ISSN: 1525-5794


  6 in total

1.  AllergyMap: An Open Source Corpus of Allergy Mention Normalizations.

Authors:  Amy Y Wang; John D Osborne; Maria I Danila; Andrew M Naidech; David M Liebovitz
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2021-01-25

2.  Medication discrepancies in resident sign-outs and their potential to harm.

Authors:  Vineet Arora; Julia Kao; David Lovinger; Samuel C Seiden; David Meltzer
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2007-10-26       Impact factor: 5.128

3.  Impact of Nutrition Care Process Documentation in Obese Children and Adolescents with Metabolic Syndrome and/or Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease.

Authors:  Gadah Mujlli; Dara Aldisi; Ghadeer S Aljuraiban; Mahmoud M A Abulmeaty
Journal:  Healthcare (Basel)       Date:  2021-02-09

4.  Improving Emergency Department Patient-Physician Conversation Through an Artificial Intelligence Symptom-Taking Tool: Mixed Methods Pilot Observational Study.

Authors:  Justus Scheder-Bieschin; Bibiana Blümke; Erwin de Buijzer; Fabienne Cotte; Fabian Echterdiek; Júlia Nacsa; Marta Ondresik; Matthias Ott; Gregor Paul; Tobias Schilling; Anne Schmitt; Paul Wicks; Stephen Gilbert
Journal:  JMIR Form Res       Date:  2022-02-07

5.  What they fill in today, may not be useful tomorrow: lessons learned from studying Medical Records at the Women hospital in Tabriz, Iran.

Authors:  Faramarz Pourasghar; Hossein Malekafzali; Alireza Kazemi; Johan Ellenius; Uno Fors
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2008-04-27       Impact factor: 3.295

6.  Incident reporting by acute pain service at a tertiary care university hospital.

Authors:  Aliya Ahmed; Muhammad Yasir
Journal:  J Anaesthesiol Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2015 Oct-Dec
  6 in total

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