Literature DB >> 17202953

An organizational approach to understanding patient safety and medical errors.

Amer Kaissi1.   

Abstract

Progress in patient safety, or lack thereof, is a cause for great concern. In this article, we argue that the patient safety movement has failed to reach its goals of eradicating or, at least, significantly reducing errors because of an inappropriate focus on provider and patient-level factors with no real attention to the organizational factors that affect patient safety. We describe an organizational approach to patient safety using different organizational theory perspectives and make several propositions to push patient safety research and practice in a direction that is more likely to improve care processes and outcomes. From a Contingency Theory perspective, we suggest that health care organizations, in general, operate under a misfit between contingencies and structures. This misfit is mainly due to lack of flexibility, cost containment, and lack of regulations, thus explaining the high level of errors committed in these organizations. From an organizational culture perspective, we argue that health care organizations must change their assumptions, beliefs, values, and artifacts to change their culture from a culture of blame to a culture of safety and thus reduce medical errors. From an organizational learning perspective, we discuss how reporting, analyzing, and acting on error information can result in reduced errors in health care organizations.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17202953     DOI: 10.1097/00126450-200610000-00002

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


  3 in total

1.  Impact of the ventilator bundle on ventilator-associated pneumonia in intensive care unit.

Authors:  Monika Pogorzelska; Patricia W Stone; E Yoko Furuya; Eli N Perencevich; Elaine L Larson; Donald Goldmann; Andrew Dick
Journal:  Int J Qual Health Care       Date:  2011-08-04       Impact factor: 2.038

2.  Up close and (inter)personal: insights from a primary care practice's efforts to improve office relationships over time, 2003-2009.

Authors:  Jenna Howard; Eric K Shaw; Elizabeth Clark; Benjamin F Crabtree
Journal:  Qual Manag Health Care       Date:  2011 Jan-Mar       Impact factor: 0.926

3.  Central line bundle implementation in US intensive care units and impact on bloodstream infections.

Authors:  E Yoko Furuya; Andrew Dick; Eli N Perencevich; Monika Pogorzelska; Donald Goldmann; Patricia W Stone
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-01-18       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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