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Where failures occur in the imaging care cycle : lessons from the radiology events register

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by D Jones, Matthew ThomasMatthew Thomas, C Mandel, J Grimm, N Hannaford, T Schultz, W Runciman
Adverse events contribute to significant patient morbidity and mortality on a global scale, and this has been documented in a number of international studies. Despite this, there is limited understanding of medical imaging’s involvement in such events. Incident reporting is a key feature of high-reliability organizations because, understandably, it is essential to know where things go wrong and why as the very first step informulating preventative and corrective strategies. Although anesthesiology has led the way, health care in general has been slow to adopt this technique, and this includes medical imaging. Knowledge as to where medical imaging incidents are initiated and detected, and why, is not well documented or appreciated, although this is critical information in relation to quality improvement. Using an online radiology reporting system, the authors therefore sought to gain further insight and also ascertain where failures are located in the imaging cycle, and whether different incidents sources provide different information. Last, the authors sought to examine the resilience of the imaging system using these incident data.

Funding

Category 2 - Other Public Sector Grants Category

History

Volume

7

Issue

8

Start Page

593

End Page

602

Number of Pages

10

eISSN

1558-349X

ISSN

1546-1440

Location

United States

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Australian Patient Safety Foundation, Adelaide; Flinders Medical Centre; Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, East Melbourne, Australia; TBA Research Institute; University of South Australia;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Journal of the American College of Radiology.

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