Patient safety ethics and human error management in ED contexts Part II: Accountability and the challenge to change☆
Summary
In recent years there has been increasing recognition internationally that health care is not as safe as it ought to be and that patient safety outcomes need to be improved. To this end, patient safety has become the focus of a world-wide endeavour – endorsed by the World Health Organisation – to reduce the incidence and impact of preventable human errors and related adverse events in health care domains. The emergency department has been identified as a significant site of preventable human errors and adverse events in the health care system, raising important questions about the nature of human error management and patient safety ethics in rapidly changing environments, of which the Emergency Department is a prime example. In Part I of this article series, an overview of the incidence and impact of preventable adverse events in Emergency Department contexts and the development of the global patient safety movement was presented. In this second article brief attention is given to examining some of the ethical tensions that have arisen in response to the patient safety movement and their possible implications for Emergency Department contexts and staff.
Keywords: Patient safety, Human error, Adverse events, Clinical risk management, Ethics, Emergency departments
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☆ An earlier version of this paper was presented as an invited paper at the College of Emergency Nursing Australasia (CENA) 2nd National Emergency Nursing Conference, 25 August 2006, Hobart, Tasmania.
PII: S1574-6267(06)00125-X
doi:10.1016/j.aenj.2006.11.001
© 2006 College of Emergency Nursing Australasia Ltd. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
