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Browsing by Subject "Errors"

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    Erratum to: APC selectively mediates response to chemotherapeutic agents in breast cancer
    (BioMed Central, 2016-11-28) VanKlompenberg, Monica K.; Bedalov, Claire O.; Soto, Katia Fernandez; Prosperi, Jenifer R.; Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, IU School of Medicine
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    Erratum to: PRISM II: an open-label study to assess effectiveness of dextromethorphan/quinidine for pseudobulbar affect in patients with dementia, stroke or traumatic brain injury
    (BioMed Central, 2016-09-02) Hammond, Flora M.; Alexander, David N.; Cutler, Andrew J.; D’Amico, Stephen; Doody, Rachelle S.; Sauve, William; Zorowitz, Richard D.; Davis, Charles S.; Shin, Paul; Ledon, Fred; Yonan, Charles; Formella, Andrea E.; Siffert, Joao; Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, IU School of Medicine
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    Nursing Perceptions of Patient Safety at Hamad Medical Corporation in the State of Qatar
    (2009-03-18T18:27:21Z) Al-Ishaq, Moza A Latif; Ebright, Patricia R.; Keck, Juanita; Stokes, Lillian; Jeffries, Pamela R.
    The ability to improve the safety of patient care delivery is dependent on the safety culture, or the norms surrounding reactions following an error, the learning that takes place, and the proactive strategies in place to prevent future errors. While measurement of patient safety culture is now common in the United States (US) using instrument specifically developed for US healthcare organizations, no measurements of safety culture had been conducted at Hamad Medical Corporation in the State of Qatar, a Middle Eastern country; nor were valid or reliable instruments available. The purpose of this study was to assess registered nurses’ perceptions of the safety culture in the units where they provide nursing care at Hamad Medical Corporation using a modified version of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) patient safety culture an instrument (Hospital Survey of Patient Safety Culture). Eight hundred surveys were distributed to all randomly-selected nurses from eight targeted clinical services with a response rate of 57%. Survey results were compared with those from US hospitals using the original AHRQ survey. Ranking of subscales for this study in terms of strengths and areas needing improvement were almost identical to the ordering of US hospital results, with teamwork within units ranked highest and indicating a strength; and the subscale non-punitive response to error the lowest and indicating an area for improvement. Positive response rates in terms of safety culture for this study were generally lower on most subscales compared to the US results and may reflect the intensity of patient safety improvement activity in the US over the last eight years in response to the Institute of Medicine’s report on medical errors in 1999. Results from this study provide a baseline measurement for safety culture at Hamad Medical Corporation and beginning adaptation of an instrument that can be used in other Middle Eastern healthcare organizations in the future.
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