Resident duty-hour restrictions demand effective communication and teamwork in patient care. The process of resident sign-out is a potential source of miscommunication and medical error. Resident sign-out was followed over a 3-month period. Residents signing out to the night coverage team were asked to identify two patient groups: (1) problem patients who were especially ill and likely to present specific clinical problems; and (2) nonproblem patients who were likely not to be at risk for a problem requiring attention. Data on adverse events collected by the night float resident were classified into three categories: a problem predicted during sign-out in a problem patient, an unpredicted problem on a problem patient, and an unpredicted problem on all other patients. Resident sign-out accurately predicted only 42 per cent of adverse events. Only one third of major adverse events were predicted at checkout. One third of events occurred in patients identified at sign-out as being in the nonproblem group. The process of transfer of care must be standardized and individual practices reviewed to prevent error. Instruction on proper transfer of care and illustrations of potential points of breakdown should be given for all levels of training.
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Acad Pathol
October 2024
Department of Pathology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Entrustable professional activities (EPAs) have been implemented in various medical specialties, and the Pathology National EPA Working Group has piloted the implementation of four pathology EPAs. We recently published the development of EPAs within our surgical pathology rotation. Following a six-month pilot, a survey demonstrated that faculty and residents found the forms helpful and easy to use and easy to understand, and EPAs have been fully incorporated into our surgical pathology rotation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med Educ
September 2024
Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Background: Miscommunications account for up to 80% of preventable medical errors. Mnemonics like I-PASS (Illness severity, Patient summary, Actions list, Situation awareness, Synthesis) have demonstrated a positive impact on reducing error rates. Currently, physicians at our hospital do not follow a specific structure during hand-offs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: An emergency department (ED) resident believed ED patients, who needed a simple laceration repair, would be better served if the ED used a laceration cart for supplies, as opposed to the hunt-and-gather method for collecting needed supplies. To address this issue, a two-step Plan-Do-Study-Act/Patient-Safety quality improvement (PDSA/PS QI) project was initiated, with the intent that the project could be completed in a timely manner regardless of staffing levels. The primary purpose of the project was two-fold: 1) to explore the possible time-to-repair benefits of using a laceration repair supply cart in the emergency department and 2) to determine the feasibility of conducting a simple multi-cycle PDSA/PS QI project in a potential staffing-shortage environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: This report describes the step-by-step process that led to expansion of ambulatory care pharmacy services at a newly established internal medicine clinic within a patient-centered medical home in North Carolina.
Summary: Implementation of clinical pharmacist services at the clinic was led by a postgraduate year 2 (PGY2) pharmacy resident and guided by the 9 steps described in the book Building a Successful Ambulatory Care Practice: A Complete Guide for Pharmacists. After a needs assessment and review of the demographics and insurance status of the clinic's target population, it was determined that pharmacist services would focus on quality measures including diabetes nephropathy screening, diabetes eye examination, blood glucose control in diabetes, discharge medication reconciliation, annual wellness visits, and medication adherence in diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, and hypertension.
Cureus
January 2024
Internal Medicine, Wayne State University Detroit Medical Center, Detroit, USA.
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