The detection, reporting, measurement, and minimization of medical errors and harms is now a core requirement in clinical organizations throughout developed societies. This book focuses on this major new area in health care. It explores the nature of medical error, its incidence in different health care settings, and strategies for minimizing errors and their harmful consequences to patients. Written by leading authorities, it discusses the practical issues involved in reducing errors in health care - for the clinician, the health policy adviser, and ethical and legal health professionals.
About the Author
Brian Hurwitz, NHS GP, Professor of Medicine and the Arts, King’s College, London.
Aziz Sheikh, NHS GP, Professor of Primary Care Research and Development, University of Edinburgh The editors have worked together on medical error in the past and have a considerable track record of jointly undertaken research and peer review publication in primary health care related fields. They have established contacts with many of the proposed chapter authors.
Features
Up to date focus on a major issue in health care worldwide
Provides the latest knowledge about how errors occur and strategies to avoid them
Written by leading clinicians and ethicists
Relevant for clinical appraisal and re-accreditation
Important for health policy makers and legal health experts