Introduction: Interruptions and multitasking are frequent in clinical settings, and have been shown in the cognitive psychology literature to affect performance, increasing the risk of error. However, comparatively less is known about their impact on errors in clinical work. This study will assess the relationship between prescribing errors, interruptions and multitasking in an emergency department (ED) using direct observations and chart review. Methods and analysis: The study will be conducted in an ED of a 440-bed teaching hospital in Sydney, Australia. Doctors will be shadowed at proximity by observers for 2 h time intervals while they are working on day shift (between 0800 and 1800). Time stamped data on tasks, interruptions and multit...
© 2019 The Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia Background: Medication errors in hospitals a...
To describe the contextual, modal and psychological classification of medication errors in the emerg...
Introduction: The study emergency department (ED) receives a new cohort of junior doctors every 6 mo...
Introduction Interruptions and multitasking are frequent in clinical settings, and have been shown i...
Objective: To examine the effect of interruptions and task complexity on error rates when prescribin...
Objective: To examine the problem of studying interruption in healthcare. Methods: Review of the int...
AIM: To explore interruptions during medication preparation and administration and their consequence...
Aim: To explore interruptions during medication preparation and administration and their consequence...
STUDY OBJECTIVE: We describe errors occurring in a busy ED. METHODS: This is a prospective, observat...
Interruptions are causal factors in medication errors. Although researchers have assessed the nature...
Background: Workflow interruptions, multitasking and workload demands are inherent to emergency depa...
Background: Medication safety is of increasing importance and understanding the nature and frequency...
Aims and objectives: To describe the contextual, modal and psychological classification of medicatio...
Purpose. The frequency of medication errors in an emergency department (ED) before and after an ED p...
Aims: To determine the frequency and cause of interruptions during intravenous medication administr...
© 2019 The Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia Background: Medication errors in hospitals a...
To describe the contextual, modal and psychological classification of medication errors in the emerg...
Introduction: The study emergency department (ED) receives a new cohort of junior doctors every 6 mo...
Introduction Interruptions and multitasking are frequent in clinical settings, and have been shown i...
Objective: To examine the effect of interruptions and task complexity on error rates when prescribin...
Objective: To examine the problem of studying interruption in healthcare. Methods: Review of the int...
AIM: To explore interruptions during medication preparation and administration and their consequence...
Aim: To explore interruptions during medication preparation and administration and their consequence...
STUDY OBJECTIVE: We describe errors occurring in a busy ED. METHODS: This is a prospective, observat...
Interruptions are causal factors in medication errors. Although researchers have assessed the nature...
Background: Workflow interruptions, multitasking and workload demands are inherent to emergency depa...
Background: Medication safety is of increasing importance and understanding the nature and frequency...
Aims and objectives: To describe the contextual, modal and psychological classification of medicatio...
Purpose. The frequency of medication errors in an emergency department (ED) before and after an ED p...
Aims: To determine the frequency and cause of interruptions during intravenous medication administr...
© 2019 The Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia Background: Medication errors in hospitals a...
To describe the contextual, modal and psychological classification of medication errors in the emerg...
Introduction: The study emergency department (ED) receives a new cohort of junior doctors every 6 mo...