Should radiology IT be owned by the chief information officer? (33/63)

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The effects of hands-free communication device systems: communication changes in hospital organizations. (34/63)

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Prehospital emergency physician activation of interventional cardiology team reduces door-to-balloon time in ST-elevation myocardial infarction. (35/63)

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Patient safety in dermatology: a review of the literature. (36/63)

OBJECTIVE: We performed a literature review of patient safety topics pertinent to dermatology and related to outpatient settings for situations in which data from dermatology are lacking. METHODS: Searches in MEDLINE via PubMed interface, OVID and Google Scholar were carried out from October, 2008 through May, 2009 for English-language articles published between 1948 and 2009. Each search combined 2 or 3 of the following terms: patient safety, medical error, human error, preventable adverse event, dermatology, outpatient, ambulatory care, medication error, diagnostic error, laboratory error, pathology error, office-based surgery, wrong-site procedure, infections, falls, laser safety, scope of practice. Personal communications, websites, books, dermatology newsletters and major textbooks were also scrutinized. Potentially relevant articles and communications were critically evaluated by the authors. References from these articles were searched for "other relevant articles." SUMMARY: Patient safety studies in dermatology and outpatient settings are lagging behind those in inpatient settings. Systems changes are needed to reduce medical errors rather than penalize individual healthcare workers. Although technology may improve patient safety in numerous aspects, it introduces new sources of errors. CONCLUSION: Our review reveals few studies on dermatologic patient safety, supporting the pressing need for such studies and reports in the future.  (+info)

Perspectives of staff nurses of the reasons for and the nature of patient-initiated call lights: an exploratory survey study in four USA hospitals. (37/63)

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Use of communication technologies to cost-effectively increase the availability of interpretation services in healthcare settings. (38/63)

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An ontology-based nurse call management system (oNCS) with probabilistic priority assessment. (39/63)

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Communication strategies and timeliness of response to life critical telemetry alarms. (40/63)

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