F Moss - Quality and Safety in Health Care, 2003 - qshc.bmj.com Poor quality and unsafe care, we have come to understand, are caused by faulty
systems and not by faulty individuals and no single group is to blame; “every
system is perfectly designed to give precisely the results that it gets”. ... Cited by 2 - Related articles - All 7 versions
DM Berwick - Quality and Safety in Health Care, 2004 - qshc.bmj.com In the UK about 5000 people die each year from hospital acquired infec- tions.
That equates to 65 000 people since this journal was launched in 1992. This is
an intolerable toll, which at least in part is linked to failure of ... Cited by 4 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions
ID Coombes, ACY Heel, DA Stowasser, CM … - Journal of Pharmacy Practice and Research, 2005 - espace.library.uq.edu.au Table 1. Nurses' recognition and response to simulated medication risk
situations Code Medication risk scenario Key messages Detected error,
appropriate action taken Aware of error, would not detect or intervene ... Cited by 4 - Related articles - BL Direct
[CITATION] Systems analysis of adverse drug events
MD Rawlins - British journal of clinical pharmacology, 2003 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov It has been inferred [1, 6] that British doctors' deficiencies as prescribers
are the result of the General Medical Council's ill-judged attempt at curricular
revision in 1993 [7]. This, I believe, is too harsh. Our failure to train ... Cited by 6 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 5 versions
SL Donaldson - Quality and Safety in Health Care, 2004 - qshc.bmj.com In November 2003 an international meeting of major importance took place in
London on the theme of patient safety. Policy makers, clinical leaders, and
experts from many coun- tries around the world came together to consider ... Cited by 7 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions
[CITATION] Building a safer NHS for patients: improving medication safety
DJ Webb, SRJ Maxwell - British journal of clinical pharmacology, 2002 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov In 1993, the General Medical Council (GMC) published the first version of
Tomorrow's Doctors [1]. This served as the blueprint for a redesign — in some
cases a radical redesign — of the undergraduate medical curriculum in UK ... Cited by 8 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 5 versions
[CITATION] Outcomes: Evaluation of the Graduate-entry MBBS Program