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Patient Perception of Safety Falling in Recent Research
Despite improvements in some key metrics for patient safety, consumers do not report a corresponding confidence in their quality of care.
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Outpatient Safety Overlooked with Focus on Inpatient
Despite years of efforts to improve patient safety, recent research indicates that nearly all the attention has been on inpatient care. Outpatient safety is being neglected and needs far more attention, researchers say.
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Kentucky Protects Clinicians from Criminal Charges
The state of Kentucky has responded to the sensational criminal prosecution of a nurse in neighboring Tennessee by enacting a law that shields healthcare providers from criminal prosecution for medical errors.
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Culture of Safety Results in Low Reported Harm Rate
A focused effort to create a just culture is paying off in big ways for the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, which is seeing low rates of errors and patient harm while instilling a sense of safety responsibility at all levels.
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Medical Students Feel Unprepared to Manage Financial Conflicts
Many medical students feel inadequately prepared to avoid negative influence from industry and feel inadequately educated on conflicts of interest, a recent study found.
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New Data Show Trends in Pediatric Ethics Consults
Pediatric ethics consultations are very infrequent and involve more diverse issues than ethics consults for adult patients. This makes it difficult to identify trends and changes.
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Diversity of Clinical Trial Participants Is Ethical Concern
Researchers soon will have additional guidance for increasing enrollment of participants from historically underrepresented populations. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued a draft guidance, Diversity Action Plans to Improve Enrollment of Participants from Underrepresented Populations in Clinical Studies.
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Stigmatizing Language in Patient Charts Linked to Diagnostic Errors
You have probably seen — and possibly even used — terms such as “difficult patient” or “drug-seeking” in medical charts. But did you ever wonder if stigmatizing language puts patients at risk for diagnostic error?
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Oncologists’ Ethical Concerns on Use of AI in Cancer Care
Most oncologists feel responsible for protecting patients from biased artificial intelligence tools, but few were confident in their ability to do so, a recent study found.
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New Data on Strategies to Increase Advance Care Planning
Despite ample evidence that advance care planning can benefit patients, families, and healthcare systems, most older adults have not completed it. Many clinicians and researchers are trying to find effective strategies to increase advance planning rates.