This article was created to help improve hospital safety. I thought that number 3, limit shifts for hospital staff, if possible, was interesting because involves cut back in employees hours. Many medical errors occur because the patients are tired and over-worked. This article states that at some Boston hospital(s) there has been a decreased by 36% in medical errors just by eliminating employees work load. Number 9, limit urinary catheter use to 3 days, was educational to me because I didn’t know that there are software programs available that will notify the physician when it is time for a change. By having computer-based software for reminders, the hospital decreased its rate in urinary tract infections from patients with catheter. Number 5, prevent central line-related bloodstream infections, was another education tip for me. The five evidence-based procedures includes hand-washing, using full-barrier precautions during the insertion of central venous catheters, cleaning the skin with chlorhexidine, avoiding the femoral site, and removing unnecessary catheters has reduced deadly infections to zero in a study perform in small and large hospitals. I just believe that that’s remarkable to reduce a rate of infection down to zero. This article talks about a lot of ways to better and improve your hospital but the one that I found to be the best and that will eliminate a lot of medical errors is number 2, build teamwork. A hospital cannot function well if there isn’t teamwork. All staff needs to come together, communicate, listen, and most importantly pay attention to everybody and everything and the flow should go a lot smoother. TeamSTEPPS was developed just to help improve teamwork within a facility.
10 Patient Safety Tips for Hospitals http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/10tips.htm
Thursday, August 28, 2008
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1 comment:
Fantastic entry! Very specific about what you learned from the article and what you found to be the most interesting points. Way to go!
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