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Scholar Results 1 - 8 of 8 citing Cleopas: Patient assessments of a hypothetical medical error: effects of health outcome,.... (0.08 sec) 

Disclosing medical errors to patients: attitudes and practices of physicians and trainees

- nih.gov
LC Kaldjian, EW Jones, BJ Wu, VL Forman- … - Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2007 - Springer
1 Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, 1-106
MEB, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, 500 Newton Road, Iowa City,
IA 52242, USA; 2 Program in Biomedical Ethics and Medical Humanities, ...
Cited by 19 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 8 versions

[PDF] Transparency, apology and disclosure of adverse outcomes


PM Weiss, F Miranda - Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinics of North America, 2008 - dc15.4shared.com
Medical errors gained widespread attention with the release of the Insti- tute
of Medicine's ''To Err Is Human'' in November of 1999. This release reported
that as many as 98,000 people die each year from inpatient medical errors. ...
Cited by 1 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 3 versions

Clinical risk management and the ethics of open disclosure Part 2. Implications for the …


MJ Johnstone - Australasian Emergency Nursing Journal, 2008 - Elsevier
Patient safety experts and other authorities have strongly postulated the open
disclosure of errors and adverse events to patients and their nominated support
persons as an essential component of effective clinical risk management in ...
Related articles - All 17 versions

Disclosing Medical Errors to Patients: It's Not What You Say, It's What They Hear


AW Wu, IC Huang, S Stokes, PJ Pronovost - Journal of general internal medicine, 2009 - Springer
BACKGROUND: There is consensus that patients should be told if they are injured
by medical care. However, there is little information on how they react to
different methods of disclosure. OBJECTIVE: To determine if volunteers' ...
Related articles - All 3 versions

Do associations between staff and inpatient feedback have the potential for improving …


VS Raleigh, D Hussey, I Seccombe, R Qi - British Medical Journal, 2009 - qshc.bmj.com
Methods: Multiple linear regression was used to model the relationship between
responses by "frontline" staff and inpatients at trust level. Staff survey items
were the explanatory variables and inpatient responses the dependent ...
Related articles - All 2 versions

Assessment of patients' tendency to give a positive or negative rating to healthcare


T Agoritsas, A Lubbeke, L Schiesari, TV … - British Medical Journal, 2009 - qshc.bmj.com
Background: Adjustment of patient satisfaction scores for case-mix variables
such as age and sex may lead to overadjustment. The patient's tendency to rate
healthcare positively or negatively may be the only variable that should be ...
Related articles - All 3 versions

Clinical risk management and the ethics of open disclosure Part I. Benefits and risks to …


MJ Johnstone - Australasian Emergency Nursing Journal, 2008 - Elsevier
Patient safety experts and other authorities have strongly postulated the open
disclosure of errors and adverse events to patients as an essential component of
effective clinical risk management in health care. Commentators also ...
Related articles - All 13 versions

Nursing management of medication errors


LA Luk, WIM Ng, KKS Ko - Nursing Ethics, 2008 - nej.sagepub.com
Address for correspondence: Andrew Luk, Kiang Wu Nursing College of Macau, China
Est. Repouso no. 35, R/C, Macau, China. Tel: 853 2956223; Fax: 853 28365204;
E-mail: ... Leung Andrew Luk, Wai I Milly Ng, Kam Ki Stanley Ko and Vai Ha Ung
Related articles - BL Direct - All 2 versions


 


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