Objectives: To assess the utility of Australian health care incident reporting systems and determine the depth of information available within a typical system. Design and setting: Incidents relating to patient misidentification occurring between 2004 and 2008 were selected from a sample extracted from a number of Australian health services' incident reporting systems using a manual search function. Main outcome measures: Incident type, aetiology (error type) and recovery (error-detection mechanism). Analyses were performed to determine category saturation. Results: All 487 selected incidents could be classified according to incident type. The most prevalent incident type was medication being administered to the wrong patient (25.7%, 125), ...
OBJECTIVES: The development and implementation of incident reporting systems within healthcare conti...
Contains fulltext : 171883.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: To ...
Objective: To develop a taxonomy describing patient safety events in general practice from reports s...
Objectives: To assess the utility of Australian health care incident reporting systems and determine...
Objectives: To assess the utility of Australian health care incident reporting systems and determine...
OBJECTIVES: To assess the utility of Australian health care incident reporting systems anddetermine ...
Objectives: To (i) compare medication errors identified at audit and observation with medication inc...
Background: A survey was conducted to assess the benefits and limitations of the Australian Incident...
Background: There has been recent rapid growth in the use of medical imaging leading to concerns abo...
Background: Incident reporting systems (IRS) are used to identify medical errors in order to learn f...
Research into improving the safety of healthcare systems has recently focused on learning how incide...
Greater focus is needed on improving patient safety in modern healthcare systems and the first step ...
Objective: Incident reporting systems are critical to understanding adverse events, in order to crea...
Context: Incident reporting systems (IRSs) are used to gather information on patient safety incident...
Objectives The development and implementation of incident reporting systems within healthcare contin...
OBJECTIVES: The development and implementation of incident reporting systems within healthcare conti...
Contains fulltext : 171883.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: To ...
Objective: To develop a taxonomy describing patient safety events in general practice from reports s...
Objectives: To assess the utility of Australian health care incident reporting systems and determine...
Objectives: To assess the utility of Australian health care incident reporting systems and determine...
OBJECTIVES: To assess the utility of Australian health care incident reporting systems anddetermine ...
Objectives: To (i) compare medication errors identified at audit and observation with medication inc...
Background: A survey was conducted to assess the benefits and limitations of the Australian Incident...
Background: There has been recent rapid growth in the use of medical imaging leading to concerns abo...
Background: Incident reporting systems (IRS) are used to identify medical errors in order to learn f...
Research into improving the safety of healthcare systems has recently focused on learning how incide...
Greater focus is needed on improving patient safety in modern healthcare systems and the first step ...
Objective: Incident reporting systems are critical to understanding adverse events, in order to crea...
Context: Incident reporting systems (IRSs) are used to gather information on patient safety incident...
Objectives The development and implementation of incident reporting systems within healthcare contin...
OBJECTIVES: The development and implementation of incident reporting systems within healthcare conti...
Contains fulltext : 171883.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: To ...
Objective: To develop a taxonomy describing patient safety events in general practice from reports s...