Journal of nursing care quality
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This study describes nurse perceptions about medication errors. Findings reveal that there are differences in the perceptions of nurses about the causes and reporting of medication errors. ⋯ Only 45.6% of the 983 nurses believed that all drug errors are reported, and reasons for not reporting include fear of manager and peer reactions. The study findings can be used in programs designed to promote medication error recognition and reduce or eliminate barriers to reporting.
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This phenomenological study explored (a) the lived experience of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), (b) the patient's view of the nurse's role, and (c) the patient as comanager of RA. The purposive sample consisted of 6 Caucasian women living in West Virginia. Using Colaizzi's methodology, a rich, exhaustive description of living with RA emerged. Recommendations for nursing care quality focus on providing personalized, holistic, and humanistic care, which may ultimately improve the patient's quality of life.
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Nurses who are sexually harassed at work face frustration and emotional and economic consequences. Historically before the 1970s, nurses had little legal recourse and tolerated sexual harassment as a necessary "evil" associated with working. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 created the option for legal remedies for sexual harassment/discrimination cases. ⋯ This article discusses the history, definition, high profile cases, research, consequences, and prevention of sexual harassment. Although research is scant and little is known of how nurses respond to harassing behavior, prevention requires coordinated activities of employers, individual employees, and the healthcare profession. Sexual harassment at work increases anxiety and undermines the nurse's ability to focus on the delivery of safe and competent care.
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Sharp-end, frontline human error occurs close to the delivery of patient care. The purpose of this article is to examine the mechanism of human error and cognition, and to explore the antecedents, attributes, and consequences of frontline human error. Fallible decision-making and actions leading to patient injury are explicated in a case study. The discussion includes strategies for preventing patient injury by refining system flaws.
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In our hospital, transition planning for order entry and clinical documentation has presented an opportunity for process changes and the ability to capture quality initiatives into data warehouses, where they can be utilized for building evidence-based practice. For example, the order entry and clinical documentation system allows for data retrieval of performance measures set by organizations including the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, and National Quality Forum. ⋯ Details of this magnitude are crucial when developing a CPR that will serve as the primary data source of clinical information. As we continue to seek IT solutions to improve patient safety and provide quality care, the use of informatics as a foundation in quality programs will provide the structure and database needed to support evidence-based practice at the point-of-care and reduce potential for error.