Five years after To Err Is Human: what have we learned?
- PMID: 15900009
- DOI: 10.1001/jama.293.19.2384
Five years after To Err Is Human: what have we learned?
Abstract
Five years ago, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) called for a national effort to make health care safe. Although progress since then has been slow, the IOM report truly "changed the conversation" to a focus on changing systems, stimulated a broad array of stakeholders to engage in patient safety, and motivated hospitals to adopt new safe practices. The pace of change is likely to accelerate, particularly in implementation of electronic health records, diffusion of safe practices, team training, and full disclosure to patients following injury. If directed toward hospitals that actually achieve high levels of safety, pay for performance could provide additional incentives. But improvement of the magnitude envisioned by the IOM requires a national commitment to strict, ambitious, quantitative, and well-tracked national goals. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality should bring together all stakeholders, including payers, to agree on a set of explicit and ambitious goals for patient safety to be reached by 2010.
Comment in
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To Err Is Human 5 years later.JAMA. 2005 Oct 12;294(14):1758-9; author reply 1759. doi: 10.1001/jama.294.14.1758-b. JAMA. 2005. PMID: 16219874 No abstract available.
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To Err Is Human 5 years later.JAMA. 2005 Oct 12;294(14):1758; author reply 1759. doi: 10.1001/jama.294.14.1758-a. JAMA. 2005. PMID: 16219875 No abstract available.
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