The Internet of Healthcare Things

By Mitch Work, MPA, FHIMSS

Many healthcare organizations are currently seeking to leverage he potential benefits of the Interne of Healthcare Things (IoHT), where objects have network connectivity and data can be shared and analyzed, resulting in better, more efficien healthcare and giving patients the power to proactively care for themselves.

Read More »

Accelerate Improvement With Systems Approach and Culture of Safety, Says Expert Panel 15 Years After To Err Is Human

In December 1999, the Institute of Medicine released To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, which launched the patient safety movement and galvanized the public’s attention with its estimate that between 44,000 and 98,000 individuals die each year in the United States from medical errors. At milestone anniversaries since then, the patient safety … Continued

Read More »

ABQAURP News: NOTICE Act Causes Confusion Over Cost-Sharing

By Charles Locke, MD, CHCQM

ABQAURP Diplomate, ACPA Board Member

On August 6, 2015, President Obama signed into law the Notice of Observation Treatment and Implication for Care Eligibility Act or NOTICE Act (Public Law 114–42). This law creates, one year from signing, a “Medicare requirement for hospital notification of observation status.”

Read More »

Six Professional Schools Provide Team-Based Learning

By Nazanin Kuseh Kalani Yazd

The University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus approaches interprofessional education in a manner that mimics the reality of working on an interprofessional team. To prepare students to work in a field that requires coordination across many different disciplines, the University of Colorado takes advantage of the diversity at its health sciences campus by bringing together students from six professional schools in one interprofessional course. In the Interprofessional Education and Development (IPED) course, students in the medical, dentistry, nursing, pharmacy, physical therapy, and physician assistant programs collaborate to solve team-based exercises in 16 two-hour sessions over the course of two years.

Read More »

Dispelling a Few Myths

By the Institute for Safe Medication Practices

Now that 2016 is underway, the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) would like to extend its sincere thanks to the many healthcare providers, consumers, advocacy groups, organizations, agencies, and companies that have allowed us to be part of their journey to reduce patient harm from medication errors. It has been both a distinct privilege and a profound responsibility to touch the lives of so many during the past year. Since becoming a charitable organization more than two decades ago, ISMP has pursued a singular mission to advance patient safety worldwide by empowering the healthcare community, including consumers, to prevent medication errors.

Read More »

Policies for the Use of Personal Mobile Devices in Surgical Suites

By Anne V. Irving, MA, FACHE, CPHRM, DFASHRM

Human factors studies indicate that distractions and multitasking increase the likelihood of error (Feil, 2013; Wiegmann, ElBardissi, Dearani, Daly, & Sundt, 2007). Allowing personnel to bring their cell phones, smartphones, or other mobile devices into a surgical suite introduces a new distraction into an already complex, noisy, high-stakes environment.

Read More »

Get FHIRed Up

By Barry P. Chaiken, MD, MPH

Although I’m a physician, not a technology expert, I’m jazzed about the FHIR® (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) specification. Organizations struggle to share patient information with each other due to data structure and definition incompatibilities. This lack of interoperability forces physicians to treat patients without the benefit of a complete patient record, which leads to duplicate testing, unnecessary procedures, misdiagnoses, and medical errors.

Read More »