Patient safety

Patient safety is a discipline that emphasizes safety in health care through the prevention, reduction, reporting and analysis of error and other types of unnecessary harm that often lead to adverse patient events. The frequency and magnitude of avoidable adverse events, often known as patient safety incidents, experienced by patients was not well known until the 1990s, when multiple countries reported significant numbers of patients harmed and killed by medical errors.[1] Recognizing that healthcare errors impact 1 in every 10 patients around the world, the World Health Organization (WHO) calls patient safety an endemic concern.[2] Indeed, patient safety has emerged as a distinct healthcare discipline supported by an immature yet developing scientific framework. There is a significant transdisciplinary body of theoretical and research literature that informs the science of patient safety[3] with mobile health apps being a growing area of research.[4]

  1. ^ Fadahunsi, Kayode Philip; Akinlua, James Tosin; O'Connor, Siobhan; Wark, Petra A; Gallagher, Joseph; Carroll, Christopher; Majeed, Azeem; O'Donoghue, John (March 2019). "Protocol for a systematic review and qualitative synthesis of information quality frameworks in eHealth". BMJ Open. 9 (3): e024722. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2018-024722. ISSN 2044-6055. PMC 6429947. PMID 30842114.
  2. ^ "World Alliance for Patient Safety". Organization Web Site. World Health Organization. Archived from the original on 2008-10-03. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  3. ^ Patrick A. Palmieri; et al. (2008). "The anatomy and physiology of error in adverse health care events". The anatomy and physiology of error in averse healthcare events. Vol. 7. pp. 33–68. doi:10.1016/S1474-8231(08)07003-1. ISBN 978-1-84663-954-8. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Tan, Yong Yu; Woulfe, Fionn; Chirambo, Griphin Baxter; Henn, Patrick; Cilliers, Liezel; Fadahunsi, Kayode Philip; Taylor-Robinson, Simon D.; O'Donoghue, John (2022-10-01). "Framework to assess the quality of mHealth apps: a mixed-method international case study protocol". BMJ Open. 12 (10): e062909. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062909. ISSN 2044-6055. PMC 9621190. PMID 36307160.

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