Patient Safety and the Reliability of Health Care Systems
- Paul Barach, MD, MPH; and
- Donald M. Berwick, MD, MPP
- From University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, and Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Boston, Massachusetts.
The dramatic increase in initiatives for patient safety as a national health care policy in the United States and several other industrialized nations has stimulated dialogue about systems redesign, culture change, and advancement of medical education and training. Patient safety and quality improvement have been identified as a critical clinical and research endeavor supported by the federal government accrediting bodies, regulatory agencies, and patient advocacy groups. Annals has been a pioneer in publishing many seminal articles devoted to patient safety (1). A new series, Patient Safety and the Reliability of Health Care Systems, is inaugurated in this issue of Annals with Runciman and colleagues' article (2), which is devoted to the need to change the roles of error and blame in health care. This series we hope will help to keep a constant drumbeat dedicated to the need to learn about new and robust ways to change the culture of health care to a culture of safety.
The Institute of Medicine report on patient safety and medical errors and its Australian and British counterpart reports offer a broad picture …
This 100-word excerpt has been provided in the absence of an abstract.
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