- ►annals.org AC O'Neil, LA Petersen, EF Cook, DW Bates, … - Annals of Internal Medicine, 1993 - Am Coll Physicians Objective: To assess the effectiveness of housestaff physician reporting as a
method for identifying adverse events on a medical service and to compare the
physician reporting mechanism with a retrospective record review mechanism. Cited by 234 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 3 versions
- ►nih.gov SN Weingart, LD Callanan, AN Ship, MD … - Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2001 - Springer OBJECTIVE: To create a voluntary reporting method for identifying adverse events
(AEs) and potential adverse events (PAEs) among medical inpatients. DESIGN:
Medical house officers asked their peers about obstacles to care, injuries ... Cited by 78 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 8 versions
- ►nursing2007.com D Boyle, D O'Connell, FW Platt, RK Albert - Critical care medicine, 2006 - journals.lww.com Skip Navigation Links Home > May 2006 - Volume 34 - Issue 5 > Disclosing errors
and adverse events in the intensive care u... ... From the Department of
Medicine, Denver Health Medical Center (DB, RKA), and University of ... Cited by 60 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 10 versions
CH Welsh, R Pedot, RJ Anderson - Journal of General Internal Medicine, 1996 - Springer OBJECTIVE: To determine whether or not prompting of medi- cal residents at
morning report enhances reporting of ad- verse events in hospitalized patients.
DESIGN: Prospective trial comparing 3-month blocks of in- tensive ... Cited by 53 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 3 versions
DJ Cullen, DW Bates, SD Small, JB Cooper, … - The Joint Commission journal on quality improvement, 1995 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov OBJECTIVES: The objectives of this study were 1) to determine the frequency with
which adverse drug events result in an incident report (IR) in hospitalized
patients; and 2) to determine if there were differences between quality ... Cited by 406 - Related articles
JL Vincent - Intensive care medicine, 1998 - Springer Abstract Background: We were in- terested in determining the current practices
and views of European in- tensive care doctors regarding com- munication with
patients and in- formed consent for interventions. Methods: A questionnaire ... Cited by 102 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 4 versions
- ►nursing2007.com S Osmon, CB Harris, WC Dunagan, D Prentice, … - Critical care medicine, 2004 - pdfs.journals.lww.com This study was conducted at a university- affiliated, urban teaching hospital:
Barnes- Jewish Hospital (1,400 beds). During a 6-month period (November 2002 to
May 2003), all patients requiring admission to the medical intensive care ... Cited by 149 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 9 versions
- ►nih.gov [PDF] AW Wu, TA Cavanaugh, SJ McPhee, B Lo, GP … - Journal of General Internal Medicine, 1997 - Springer E rrare humanum est: "to err is human." In medical practice, mistakes are
eonmlon, expected, mid under- standable. 1, Virtually all practicing physicians
have made mistakes, but physicians often do not tell patients or families ... Cited by 191 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 8 versions
LB Andrews, C Stocking, T Krizek, L Gottlieb, … - The Lancet, 1997 - Elsevier Data about the frequency of adverse events related to inappropriate care in
hospitals come from studies of medical records as if they represented a true
record of adverse events. In a prospective, observational design we ... Cited by 364 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 3 versions
- ►nursing2007.com JM Rothschild, CP Landrigan, JW Cronin, R … - Critical Care Medicine, 2005 - journals.lww.com Critical care presents substantial pa- tient safety challenges. It is
fast-paced, is complex, and commonly requires ur- gent high-risk
decision-making, often with incomplete data and by physicians with varying ... Cited by 236 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 17 versions