Patient Safety, Quality Care, and Medical Errors in Nursing

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Because nurses are the largest group of healthcare providers, they are in the best position to improve patient safety and quality of care. While teaching and preparing students to become nurses, nurse educators have a very important role in helping to develop the knowledge, skills, and attitudes of upcoming nurses related to patient safety. Healthcare professionals, such as nurses, are highly skilled and well educated, but the healthcare system continues to be disrupted by quality and safety issues. Healthcare errors occur at an alarmingly high incidence and are the eighth leading cause of death (IOM, 2000; Langdrigan, Parry, Bones, Goldman, and Sharek, 2010). The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) has estimated that there are 40,000 incidents of medical errors every day. At least 1.5 million preventable medication errors occur each year in the United States. Nurses, as one of the largest groups of healthcare providers, have new roles and responsibilities to improve patient safety and quality. Nurses can attempt to do this through being educated. Safety and Quality of care are two of the most important morals in nursing and healthcare. Being well equipped in these two areas is based on the commitment to uphold ethical principles to do no harm, always safeguard the patient, and act with ethical comportment (Egan, 2013). Nurses come to work wanting to perform good work and help the patient heal as best as they can, but sometimes assortments of problems get in the way of focusing on quality care. Sometimes, nurses lack the tools to perform quality care, or they may work in systems where good work is not recognized or supported. Recent evidence shows that nurses want to work in systems that recognize good work and uphol... ... middle of paper ... ...ng, MA: Jones and Bartlett. Institute of Medicine (IOM). (2000). To err is human: Building a safer health system. Washington, DC: National Academy Press. Retrieved from http://www.iom.edu/Reports/1999/To-Err-is-Human-Building-A-Safer-Health- System.aspx Landrigan, C.P., Parry, G.J., Bones, A.D., Goldman, D.A., and Sharek, P.J., (2010) Temporal trends in rates of patient harm resulting from medical care. New England Journal of Medicine. 363, 2124-2134. Sherwood, G., & Zomorodi, M. (2014). A New Mindset for Quality and Safety: The QSEN Competencies Redefine Nurses’ Roles in Practice. Nephrology Nursing Journal, 41, 15-22, 72. Wong, C., and Cummings, G. (2007). The relationship between nursing leadership and patient outcomes: a systematic review. Journal of Nursing Management, 10(2), 285- 305.

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