Berman S
Jt Comm J Qual Improv. 2000 Jul;26(7):428-33. doi: 10.1016/s1070-3241(00)26036-7.
More than 200 health care policy makers and researchers, clinicians, quality professionals, and other representatives of health care organizations, government, and academia attended the Division of American Medical Association Clinical Quality Improvement's conference, "Addressing Patient Safety," April 28, 2000, in Chicago--the first national conference to respond to the recent Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System. ADDRESSING PATIENT SAFETY--PUBLIC AND PRIVATE PERSPECTIVES: John M. Eisenberg, MD, stated that research on errors is needed to describe the scope and nature of the problem, understand the barriers to and benefits of improvement, and develop and test strategies for improvement. Kenneth W. Kizer, MD, MPH, stated that the National Quality Forum will develop a compendium of best practices and will develop core measures for serious adverse events, and health care organizations and government health programs should act now to make a clear organizational commitment to patient safety, create a nonpunitive health care culture of safety, and implement known safe medication practices. Alan R. Nelson, MD, stated that the IOM report places its emphasis on continuous quality improvement and technology that can be used to mitigate the risks in a complex health system.
Donald M. Nielsen, MD, discussed the American Hospital Association's (AHA's) Medication Safety Initiative, which promised to provide its members with successful practices, tools, and resources and to track progress of implementation of the recommended successful practices. Dennis S. O'Leary, MD, stated that when a hospital reports a sentinel event, the hospital is expected to implement improvements to reduce risk and monitor their effectiveness. The National Committee for Quality Assurance is considering changes to its accreditation standards to further address patient safety.
2000年4月28日,200多名医疗保健政策制定者、研究人员、临床医生、质量专业人员以及医疗保健组织、政府和学术界的其他代表参加了美国医学协会临床质量改进部的会议“解决患者安全问题”,该会议在芝加哥举行,是首个回应近期医学研究所(IOM)报告《人非圣贤,孰能无过:构建更安全的医疗体系》的全国性会议。
解决患者安全问题——公共和私人视角:医学博士约翰·M·艾森伯格表示,需要对医疗差错进行研究,以描述问题的范围和性质,了解改进的障碍和益处,并制定和测试改进策略。医学博士、公共卫生硕士肯尼斯·W·凯泽表示,国家质量论坛将编制一份最佳实践汇编,并制定严重不良事件的核心指标,医疗保健组织和政府医疗项目应立即采取行动,明确做出对患者安全的组织承诺,营造一种非惩罚性的医疗安全文化,并实施已知的安全用药实践。医学博士艾伦·R·尼尔森表示,IOM报告强调持续质量改进以及可用于降低复杂医疗体系中风险的技术。
医学博士唐纳德·M·尼尔森讨论了美国医院协会(AHA)的用药安全倡议,该倡议承诺为其成员提供成功实践、工具和资源,并跟踪推荐的成功实践的实施进展。医学博士丹尼斯·S·奥利里表示,当医院报告一起警示事件时,预计医院会实施改进措施以降低风险并监测其效果。国家质量保证委员会正在考虑对其认证标准进行修改,以进一步解决患者安全问题。