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Unit 4 Discussion " Project Design and Management for Health, Lecture notes of Accounting

Unit 4 Discussion " Project Design and Management for HealthcareHello class,ï,·When could patient compliance be considered a Medical Error? Why might a person consider it such? Defend your answer. A person might consider patient compliance to be a medical error if the lack of compliance lead to a poor outcome. This may be the case if a patient skips medication doses, takes medications together that should be taken separately, or simply chooses not to take medication at all, resulting in a poor outcome. While this isn't generally classified as a medical error, I believe it should be considered an opportunity for improvement for the providers involved in that patient's care. These types of non-compliance are generally related to a lack of understanding or knowledge by the patient. As healthcare providers, we should strive to improve communication and educational strategies to ensure the patient trusts that we understand their condition and concerns and provide the medications and treatm

Typology: Lecture notes

2023/2024

Available from 06/27/2024

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Download Unit 4 Discussion " Project Design and Management for Health and more Lecture notes Accounting in PDF only on Docsity! Unit 4 Discussion – Project Design and Management for Healthcare Hello class,  When could patient compliance be considered a Medical Error? Why might a person consider it such? Defend your answer. A person might consider patient compliance to be a medical error if the lack of compliance lead to a poor outcome. This may be the case if a patient skips medication doses, takes medications together that should be taken separately, or simply chooses not to take medication at all, resulting in a poor outcome. While this isn't generally classified as a medical error, I believe it should be considered an opportunity for improvement for the providers involved in that patient's care. These types of non-compliance are generally related to a lack of understanding or knowledge by the patient. As healthcare providers, we should strive to improve communication and educational strategies to ensure the patient trusts that we understand their condition and concerns and provide the medications and treatment necessary (Barber, 2002).  Compare and contrast errors caused by action versus inaction. Errors caused by "action" are the result of the person performing the process or procedure. This type of error can be attributed to planning errors such as knowledge-based errors, a physician misinterprets an x-ray, or rule-based errors when the person performing the tasks fails to follow the rules in place. This can occur if the individual fails to ask the patient which leg is to be operated on before surgery (Sollecito, 2013). Action errors can also be execution errors that occur due to skill-based lapses and slips. A skill-based lapse is when the individual errs due to failure to recall the steps correctly, while a slip is due to confusion due to interference or distraction (Sollecito, 2013). Action errors can also be attributed to intention problems; these are known as violations and are generally related to individuals intentionally taking short cuts or skipping steps due to personal motivation (Sollecito, 2013). On the other hand, inactive errors can be caused by decisions made at an organizational level one example might be the decision to cut staffing levels to save money, or another might be a flawed process or equipment design (Sollecito, 2013).  Using the aviation industry's approach to quality improvement, where might it be useful in the U.S. health care system? The aviation industry approach would be useful to improve patient safety and quality of care. By using this approach, U.S. healthcare organizations could become safer and more reliable. Today in healthcare, many of the aviation industry techniques are being put into place as part of CQI