Health Care Quality
Types of errors
Safety Theories
Organizational safety and culture
Regulations and transparency
100

What is the definition of Health Care Quality?

The degree to which health services improve health outcomes and align with professional knowledge.

100

What is a diagnostic error?

An incorrect or delayed diagnosis (e.g., misinterpreting lab results).

100

What is the Swiss Cheese Model?

A theory that explains errors occur when weaknesses in multiple safety layers align, leading to harm.

100

What does a culture of safety promote?

Teamwork, open communication, and continuous improvement.

100

What organization oversees Medicare & Medicaid services?

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

200

Name two components of quality of care

Patient-centered care, safety, efficiency, evidence-based care, resource efficiency, patient satisfaction

200

Name one example of a treatment error.

Administering the wrong medication, incorrect dosage, wrong procedure.

200

What does Crew Resource Management (CRM) emphasize?

Teamwork, communication, and decision-making skills to enhance safety (borrowed from aviation).

200

What is Just Culture?

A system that encourages error reporting without punishment but holds individuals accountable when necessary.

200

What is the role of The Joint Commission?

Accredits and certifies healthcare organizations to ensure safety and quality standards.

300

What does evidence-based care delivery mean?

Using the best research and clinical expertise to guide patient treatment.

300

What is a latent error?

A system-based failure that is not immediately visible but contributes to mistakes (e.g., poor EHR design).

300

What is Human Factors science?

The study of how humans interact with technology and the work environment to reduce errors.

300

Why is error reporting important in a Just Culture?

It helps identify problems, prevent future errors, and improve patient safety.

300

Why is transparency important in healthcare?

It builds patient trust and encourages learning from mistakes.

400

What is patient-centered care?

Providing care that respects and responds to individual patient needs, preferences, and values.

400

How does miscommunication contribute to patient harm?

It can lead to incorrect treatments, delayed care, or medication errors.

400

What is the focus of High-Reliability Organizations (HROs)?

Operating in high-risk environments while maintaining low error rates.

400

What is an active error?

A direct mistake made by a healthcare provider (e.g., administering the wrong medication).

400

How should errors be communicated to patients and families?

Promptly and openly, with clear explanations and corrective actions.

500

What are the six major attributes of high-quality care?

Safety, Effectiveness, Patient-Centeredness, Timeliness, Efficiency, and Equity.

500

What is a preventive error?

Failure to provide necessary preventive care (e.g., not administering vaccines).

500

How does the Swiss Cheese Model relate to safety in healthcare?

It illustrates how multiple safeguards should exist to prevent harm, but when gaps align, errors occur.

500

Name two strategies to improve a culture of safety.

Encouraging teamwork, improving communication, implementing safety checklists, leadership commitment.

500

What are two benefits of regulatory oversight in healthcare?

Ensures patient safety, reduces errors, improves care quality, enforces standards.