Participating in patients for patient safety program will help place patients at the center of efforts to improve patient safety. This paper presented a brief introduction to patients for patient safety program and its significance and functions.
During the medical rescue of Wenchuan earthquake, West China Hospital immediately shifted to the two-track emergent system mode. More works have been done in time to cure and treat those critically ill patients effectively and to protect the medical safety of patients. The Activated Contingency Plans for major disasters have been started up to evacuate safely those mild patients in the hospital,to prevent out of danger and other accidents. More works have done on the identification of the injured or patients to improve the accuracy and strictly implement the "three investigations and seven right" system to prevent a wrong operation, or a wrong prescription, or a wrong transfusion. We have worked carefully on the referral the wounded, to referr the wounded to those Hospitals in Chengdu or other province and to prevent security incidents.
ObjectiveTo investigate and analyze the knowledge, skills and attitudes of nursing students to patient safety before and after internship so as to provide evidence for implementation of patient safety curriculum in nursing students.
MethodsUndergraduate nursing students before and after internship in nursing school of Wannan Medical College were recruited. The questionnaire method was performed to investigate the knowledge, attitudes and skills of patient safety before and after the internship. The data were input using EpiData 3.0 software and were analyzed by SPSS 13.0.
ResultsA total of 451 questionnaires were distributed before the internship and of which 435 nursing students completed the survey (96.45%), 418 questionnaires were distributed after the internship, of which 412 (98.56%) nursing students completed the survey. There were significant higher scores in female nursing students after the internship in the items of 'Knowledge about medical errors' and 'What am I supposed to do when medical errors occur' (P=0.000 and 0.000, respectively), while lower scores of the items of 'Feelings about making errors' and 'Your intentions regarding patient safety' (P=0.002 and 0.006, respectively). Only the score of the item 'What am I supposed to do when medical errors occur' was significantly higher in male nursing students after the internship (P=0.046).
ConclusionThe internship is useful for improving experiencing practice, knowledge on patient safety, reduce the negative feelings about making errors.
Objective Interpretation of the growing body of global literature on health care risk is compromised by a lack of common understanding and language. This series of articles aims to comprehensively compare laws and regulations, institutional management, and administration of incidence reporting systems on medical risk management in the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Australia, and Taiwan, so as to provide evidence and recommendations for health care risk management policy in China. Methods?We searched the official websites of the healthcare risk management agencies of the four countries and one district for laws, regulatory documents, research reports, reviews and evaluation forms concerned with healthcare risk management and assessment. Descriptive comparative analysis was performed on relevant documents. Results?A total of 146 documents were included in this study, including 2 laws (1.4%), 17 policy documents (11.6%), 41 guidance documents (28.1%), 37 reviews (25.3%), and 49 documents giving general information (33.6%). The United States government implemented one law and one rule of patient safety management, while the United Kingdom and Australia each issued professional guidances on patient safety improvement. The four countries implemented patient safety management policy on four different levels: national, state/province/district, hospital, and non-governmental organization. Conclusion?The four countries and one district adopted four levels of patient safety management, and the administration modes can be divided into an “NGO-led mode” represented by the United States and Canada and a “government-led mode” represented by the United Kingdom, Australia, and Taiwan.
This article introduced the structure and features of the medical safety and quality management system of New South Wales (NSW) of Australia. The system was funded by government with overall design, multi-sectors involvement, and explicit roles of government, hospitals, and independent third parties. The system also developed national and state-wide regulations, policies, standards and their certification. The NSW Health Incident Information Management System (IIMS), the guidelines and interventional programs were also established to decrease the medical risk and ensure the healthcare quality. This system will be used for reference to the national medical risk and quality management system of China.
ObjectiveTo investigate and analyze the knowledge, skills and attitudes of clinical medical students and nursing students to patient safety before internship so as to provide evidence for implementation of patient safety curriculum in medical and nursing students.
MethodsFive-year clinical medical undergraduates and nursing students before internship in the Wannan Medical College were recruited. The questionnaire method was performed to investigate the knowledge, attitudes and skills of patient safety. The data were input using EpiData 3.0 software and were analyzed by SPSS 13.0.
ResultsA total of 771 questionnaires were distributed, of which 320 clinical medical students and 435 nursing students completed the survey. The results showed that, the totals of both kinds of students were low concerning the knowledge, attitudes and skills of patient safety; scores were significantly higher in nursing students than in clinical medical students concerning the items of "Knowledge about medical errors" (P=0.012), "Feelings about making errors" (P=0.000), "Feelings about making errors" (P=0.001), and "Personal attitudes to patient safety" (P=0.001). Scores of "Feelings about making errors" were significantly higher in female students than in male students.
ConclusionBoth nursing students and clinical medical students lack the knowledge of patient safety before internship, and the latter lack more. More attention should be paid to the knowledge of patient safety for both clinical medical and nursing students.
This paper introduces the current situation of patient safety movement in 20 years from its origin, and expounds the strategies of patient safety from six view points of medical reform, medical insurance, system, culture, education and training, and patient participation in patient safety, so as to promote the healthy development of patient safety work in China.
Informing is an initiative behavior of medical staff in their clinical practice. Besides, informing is a key
principle of informed consent. The number of cases of infringing upon patient’s informed consent is increasing because of
the underestimate or ignorance of the obligation of informing. This paper discusses the concept, significance, content, and
procedure of informing as well as the relationship between informed consent and informing.
Objective To analyze experiences of medical risk management in the United Kingdom so as to explore the possible application for the construction of a Chinese medical risk monitoring and early warning system. Methods We searched Engineering Information, SCI and SSCI, EMBASE, SCOPUS with 100% MEDLINE, VIP, CNKI, and government or official websites. This search was conducted in Jan. 2006. We included articles about medical risk, patient safety and medical errors in the UK. Languages of articles were limited either in English or in Chinese. Results Eleven articles were included, of which 9 article are evidence of level B (about 80%) and the other 2 are evidence of level C (about 20%). The report of “An Organization with a Memory” revealed the severity of medical errors and adverse events in the UK in 2000, and subsequently Minister Blair announced a five-year reform program for NHS. Within 7 years of reform, NHS budget has been increased from £33 billion to £674 billion,(check numbers-doesn’t sound correct) the National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) and the New National System for learning from adverse events and near misses have been established, a series of practicable measures aimed at ensuring patient safety, preventing medical risk and improving healthcare quality have been implemented, all of which have effectively resolved many problems that perplexed the government and public, such as patients waiting time, range of NHS service, the availability of medical facility and mortality induced by high-risk diseases. Conclusion There are both advantages and disadvantages in the present status of the UK medical risk management. Both of them will provide a guide to prevent medical risk, improve healthcare quality and to realize the ultimate goal that everybody could share healthcare sources fairly and safely in our country.