Background: Hospital readmission rates are increasingly used as a measure of healthcare quality. Medicines are the most common therapeutic intervention but estimating the contribution of adverse drug events as a cause of readmissions is difficult.Objectives: To assess the prevalence and preventability of medication-related readmissions within 30 days after hospital discharge and to describe the risk factors, type of medication errors and types of medication involved in these preventable readmissions.Design: A cross-sectional observational study.Setting: The study took place across the cardiology, gastroenterology, internal medicine, neurology, psychiatry, pulmonology and general surgery departments in the OLVG teaching hospital, Netherlands...
Background: According to the evidence, hospital readmissions within a month of discharge occur in ap...
Background:Many experts believe that hospitals with more frequent readmissions provide lower-quality...
Background: It is unclear if the 30-day unplanned hospital readmission rate is a plausible accountab...
Background: Hospital readmission rates are increasingly used as a measure of healthcare quality. Med...
Background: Hospital readmission rates are increasingly used as a measure of healthcare quality. Med...
Background: Hospital readmissions are increasingly used as an indicator of quality in health care. O...
BACKGROUND: Hospital readmissions are increasingly used as an indicator of quality in health care. O...
ObjectivesTo identify the preventability, determinants and causes of unplanned hospital readmissions...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVES: To summarize the evidence on the prevalence and preventabi...
BACKGROUND Hospital readmissions due to medication-related problems occur frequently, burdening p...
BACKGROUND: Previous studies have shown that approximately 20% of hospital readmissions can be medic...
ObjectivesTo summarize the evidence on the prevalence and preventability of drug-related hospital re...
Background: Medication-related problems that lead to hospitalization have been the subject of many s...
IMPORTANCE: Readmission penalties have catalyzed efforts to improve care transitions, but few progra...
Background: Many experts believe that hospitals with more frequent readmissions provide lower-qualit...
Background: According to the evidence, hospital readmissions within a month of discharge occur in ap...
Background:Many experts believe that hospitals with more frequent readmissions provide lower-quality...
Background: It is unclear if the 30-day unplanned hospital readmission rate is a plausible accountab...
Background: Hospital readmission rates are increasingly used as a measure of healthcare quality. Med...
Background: Hospital readmission rates are increasingly used as a measure of healthcare quality. Med...
Background: Hospital readmissions are increasingly used as an indicator of quality in health care. O...
BACKGROUND: Hospital readmissions are increasingly used as an indicator of quality in health care. O...
ObjectivesTo identify the preventability, determinants and causes of unplanned hospital readmissions...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVES: To summarize the evidence on the prevalence and preventabi...
BACKGROUND Hospital readmissions due to medication-related problems occur frequently, burdening p...
BACKGROUND: Previous studies have shown that approximately 20% of hospital readmissions can be medic...
ObjectivesTo summarize the evidence on the prevalence and preventability of drug-related hospital re...
Background: Medication-related problems that lead to hospitalization have been the subject of many s...
IMPORTANCE: Readmission penalties have catalyzed efforts to improve care transitions, but few progra...
Background: Many experts believe that hospitals with more frequent readmissions provide lower-qualit...
Background: According to the evidence, hospital readmissions within a month of discharge occur in ap...
Background:Many experts believe that hospitals with more frequent readmissions provide lower-quality...
Background: It is unclear if the 30-day unplanned hospital readmission rate is a plausible accountab...