Editorials
Incident reporting and patient safety
BMJ 2007; 334 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.39071.441609.80 (Published 11 January 2007) Cite this as: BMJ 2007;334:51Related articles
- Research Published: 11 January 2007; BMJ 334 doi:10.1136/bmj.39031.507153.AE
- RESEARCH Published: 15 December 2006; BMJ doi:10.1136/bmj.39031.507153.AE
- Practice Published: 01 April 2010; BMJ 340 doi:10.1136/bmj.c1234
- Letter Published: 25 January 2007; BMJ 334 doi:10.1136/bmj.39101.389271.1F
- Practice Published: 19 November 2009; BMJ 339 doi:10.1136/bmj.b4489
See more
- Individual care plans reduce falls and broken hips in New Zealand hospitalsBMJ December 05, 2016, 355 i6490; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i6490
- Bill to boost medical research funding and speed drug approval passes US houseBMJ December 01, 2016, 355 i6498; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i6498
- Workloads threaten to undermine doctors’ training, GMC findsBMJ December 01, 2016, 355 i6495; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i6495
- Junior doctors’ low morale is putting patients at risk, Royal College of Physicians warnsBMJ December 01, 2016, 355 i6493; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i6493
- Funds are not reaching frontline servicesBMJ November 28, 2016, 355 i6273; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i6273
Cited by...
- Effect of the Green Cross method on patient safety culture in a postanaesthesia care unit: a longitudinal quasi-experimental study
- Patient safety, self-injection, and B12 deficiency: a UK cross-sectional survey
- Preventing critical failure. Can routinely collected data be repurposed to predict avoidable patient harm? A quantitative descriptive study
- Analysis of paediatric long-term ventilation incidents in the community
- Paediatric enteral feeding at home: an analysis of patient safety incidents
- Connecting perspectives on quality and safety: patient-level linkage of incident, adverse event and complaint data
- Knowledge, attitude and practice on medication error reporting among health practitioners in a tertiary care setting in Saudi Arabia
- From incident reporting to the analysis of the patient journey
- Nature of Blame in Patient Safety Incident Reports: Mixed Methods Analysis of a National Database
- International recommendations for national patient safety incident reporting systems: an expert Delphi consensus-building process
- Absconding: reducing failure to return in adult mental health wards
- The problem with incident reporting
- A cross-sectional mixed methods study protocol to generate learning from patient safety incidents reported from general practice
- Patient and carer identified factors which contribute to safety incidents in primary care: a qualitative study
- Making healthcare safer by understanding, designing and buying better IT
- Developing a reliable and valid patient measure of safety in hospitals (PMOS): a validation study
- Patient safety in vitreoretinal surgery: quality improvements following a patient safety reporting system
- Development of an evidence-based framework of factors contributing to patient safety incidents in hospital settings: a systematic review
- Patients and families as safety experts
- Central or local incident reporting? A comparative study in Dutch GP out-of-hours services
- System-wide learning from root cause analysis: a report from the New South Wales Root Cause Analysis Review Committee
- The harm susceptibility model: a method to prioritise risks identified in patient safety reporting systems
- Using care bundles to reduce in-hospital mortality: quantitative survey
- National Patient Safety Agency: combining stories with statistics to minimise harm
- Levels of agreement on the grading, analysis and reporting of significant events by general practitioners: a cross-sectional study
- An epistemology of patient safety research: a framework for study design and interpretation. Part 3. End points and measurement
- Seeing the picture through "lean thinking"