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Aitebureme Aigbe

Researcher at University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Publications -  5
Citations -  82

Aitebureme Aigbe is an academic researcher from University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. The author has contributed to research in topics: Patient safety & Patient experience. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications receiving 63 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Patients as Partners in Learning from Unexpected Events

TL;DR: Health care organizations should interview patients/family about the event that harmed them to help ensure a full understanding of the causes of the event, and opportunities for organizational learning from patients are potentially being missed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Barriers to Accurate Blood Pressure Measurement in the Medical Office.

TL;DR: Correct measurement of BP is affected by a wide range of factors and is challenging to accomplish consistently in primary care, and the findings may inform the design of performance improvement programs to maximize the quality of BP measurement in the outpatient setting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-Term Impacts Faced by Patients and Families After Harmful Healthcare Events.

TL;DR: These patients and families experienced many profound LTIs after their harmful medical event, and for some, these impacts evolved into secondary harms ongoing 10 years and more after the event.

Developing the Improving Post-event Analysis and Communication Together (IMPACT) Tool to Involve Patients and Families in Post- Event Analysis

TL;DR: An interprofessional team convened to develop a semi-structured tool to be used in eliciting patient feedback that incorporates a conversational flow of questions that allows patients to tell their story, focus their attention on specific causative factors, and give recommendations to improve healthcare in their institutions or to prevent further harm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why Do Surgeons Fail to Disclose Medical Errors

TL;DR: Analyses using volume as a continuous variable confirmed its association with mortality (p<0.0001) and median costs were not significantly increased across volume quartiles.