Terms
Terms 2
Who did it?
Harm scores and human error
Potpourri
100

Failure of a planned action to be completed as intended or the use of a wrong plan to achieve an aim

What is an error?

100

Any preventable event that may cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm

What is a medication error?

100

The founder of the “Swiss cheese model”

Who is James Reason?

100

This harm score category describes circumstances or events that have the capacity to cause error.

What is category A or unsafe conditions?

100

An unexpected occurrence involving death or serious physical or psychological injury or “risk thereof.”

What is a sentinel event?

200

Freedom from accidental injury

The establishment of operational systems and processes that minimize the likelihood of errors and maximize the likelihood of intercepting them so that harm won’t occur

What is patient safety?

200

Any response that is noxious, unintended, and undesired occurring at doses normally used in man for prophylaxis, diagnosis, or therapy

What is an adverse drug reaction?

200

This man, sometimes known as the “father of patient safety,” defined medical error.

Who is Lucian Leape?

200

This harm score category is an error occurred that may have contributed or resulted in patient death

What is category I?

200

Failure to see an object because attention is not focused on it

What is inattentional blindness?

300

The broad term applied to both ADE’s and medication errors

What are medication misadventures?

300

Describes any harm resulting from the use of a medication

What is an adverse drug event?

300

This organization defined "sentinel event."

Who is The Joint Commission?

300

This is a type of human error, an attention failure

What is a slip?

300

You see what you want to see.

You hear what you want to hear.

What is confirmation bias?

400

Developed by James Reason to describe how an error happens with active and latent failures

What is the Swiss cheese model?

400

Errors that have the potential to cause patient harm but did not

What are near-misses or close calls?

400

In 2009, this group finalized the definition for near misses.

Who is is NCC-MERP?

400

This describes human error that occurred at a conscious level

What is a mistake?

400

Working around safety standards becoming the norm over time

What is normalization of deviance?

500

Two types of failures that allow an error to propagate through a system/process

What are active or latent failures?

500

Drugs that bear a heightened risk of causing significant patient harm when they are used in error

What are high alert medications?

500

This group developed the taxonomy for medication error harm scores.

Who is is NCC-MERP?

500

A type of human error, this is a memory failure

What is a lapse?

500

These are two drug classes that are considered high alert medications

What are opioid infusions, chemotherapy, anticoagulants, insulin, concentrated electrolytes, neuromuscular blocking agents?

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