Institution
National Patient Safety Foundation
Nonprofit•Boston, Massachusetts, United States•
About: National Patient Safety Foundation is a nonprofit organization based out in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Patient safety & Health care. The organization has 2199 authors who have published 2630 publications receiving 61693 citations. The organization is also known as: NPSF.
Topics: Patient safety, Health care, Population, Poison control, MEDLINE
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: An evidence-based intervention resulted in a large and sustained reduction (up to 66%) in rates of catheter-related bloodstream infection that was maintained throughout the 18-month study period.
Abstract: A b s t r ac t A total of 108 ICUs agreed to participate in the study, and 103 reported data. The analysis included 1981 ICU-months of data and 375,757 catheter-days. The median rate of catheter-related bloodstream infection per 1000 catheter-days decreased from 2.7 infections at baseline to 0 at 3 months after implementation of the study intervention (P≤0.002), and the mean rate per 1000 catheter-days decreased from 7.7 at baseline to 1.4 at 16 to 18 months of follow-up (P<0.002). The regression model showed a significant decrease in infection rates from baseline, with incidence-rate ratios continuously decreasing from 0.62 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.47 to 0.81) at 0 to 3 months after implementation of the intervention to 0.34 (95% CI, 0.23 to 0.50) at 16 to 18 months. Conclusions An evidence-based intervention resulted in a large and sustained reduction (up to 66%) in rates of catheter-related bloodstream infection that was maintained throughout the 18-month study period.
3,844 citations
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TL;DR: The epidemiology of endemic health-care-associated infection in developing countries is assessed and a need to improve surveillance and infection-control practices is indicated.
1,737 citations
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TL;DR: The epidemic of patient harm in hospitals must be taken more seriously if it is to be curtailed and fully engaging patients and their advocates during hospital care, systematically seeking the patients’ voice in identifying harms, transparent accountability for harm, and intentional correction of root causes of harm will be necessary.
Abstract: ObjectivesBased on 1984 data developed from reviews of medical records of patients treated in New York hospitals, the Institute of Medicine estimated that up to 98,000 Americans die each year from medical errors. The basis of this estimate is nearly 3 decades old; herein, an updated estimate is deve
1,245 citations
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TL;DR: Insight is gained into the thermoplasmonic enhancement and its applicability in the nucleic acid tests and viral disease diagnosis and an alternative and promising solution for the clinical COVID-19 diagnosis is provided.
Abstract: The ongoing outbreak of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has spread globally and poses a threat to public health in more than 200 countries. Reliable laboratory diagnosis of the disease has been one of the foremost priorities for promoting public health interventions. The routinely used reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) is currently the reference method for COVID-19 diagnosis. However, it also reported a number of false-positive or -negative cases, especially in the early stages of the novel virus outbreak. In this work, a dual-functional plasmonic biosensor combining the plasmonic photothermal (PPT) effect and localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) sensing transduction provides an alternative and promising solution for the clinical COVID-19 diagnosis. The two-dimensional gold nanoislands (AuNIs) functionalized with complementary DNA receptors can perform a sensitive detection of the selected sequences from severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) through nucleic acid hybridization. For better sensing performance, the thermoplasmonic heat is generated on the same AuNIs chip when illuminated at their plasmonic resonance frequency. The localized PPT heat is capable to elevate the in situ hybridization temperature and facilitate the accurate discrimination of two similar gene sequences. Our dual-functional LSPR biosensor exhibits a high sensitivity toward the selected SARS-CoV-2 sequences with a lower detection limit down to the concentration of 0.22 pM and allows precise detection of the specific target in a multigene mixture. This study gains insight into the thermoplasmonic enhancement and its applicability in the nucleic acid tests and viral disease diagnosis.
796 citations
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01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: A conceptual model including key factors that influence participation and invite patients to contribute to error prevention is proposed, and further research is essential to establish key determinants for the success of patient participation in reducing medical errors and in improving patient safety.
Abstract: Patient participation is increasingly recognized as a key component in the redesign of health care processes and is advocated as a means to improve patient safety. The concept has been successfully applied to various areas of patient care, such as decision making and the management of chronic diseases. We review the origins of patient participation, discuss the published evidence on its efficacy, and summarize the factors influencing its implementation. Patient-related factors, such as acceptance of the new patient role, lack of medical knowledge, lack of confidence, comorbidity, and various sociodemographic parameters, all affect willingness to participate in the health care process. Among health care workers, the acceptance and promotion of patient participation are influenced by other issues, including the desire to maintain control, lack of time, personal beliefs, type of illness, and training in patient-caregiver relationships. Social status, specialty, ethnic origin, and the stakes involved also influence patient and health care worker acceptance. The London Declaration, endorsed by the World Health Organization World Alliance for Patient Safety, calls for a greater role for patients to improve the safety of health care worldwide. Patient participation in hand hygiene promotion among staff to prevent health care—associated infection is discussed as an illustrative example. A conceptual model including key factors that influence participation and invite patients to contribute to error prevention is proposed. Further research is essential to establish key determinants for the success of patient participation in reducing medical errors and in improving patient safety.
727 citations
Authors
Showing all 2221 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Frank B. Hu | 250 | 1675 | 253464 |
David W. Bates | 159 | 1239 | 116698 |
Ara Darzi | 123 | 1613 | 64907 |
Peter J. Pronovost | 118 | 737 | 55076 |
Didier Pittet | 111 | 663 | 54319 |
Albert W. Wu | 107 | 513 | 48522 |
Giuseppe Lippi | 95 | 2017 | 51444 |
Charles Vincent | 91 | 459 | 28542 |
Stéphan Juergen Harbarth | 85 | 498 | 36966 |
Sanjay Saint | 83 | 441 | 30373 |
Peter Bower | 83 | 452 | 28175 |
Dale M. Needham | 82 | 376 | 29351 |
Lisa A. Cooper | 73 | 283 | 19211 |
Stephen Campbell | 71 | 364 | 22936 |
Nick Sevdalis | 70 | 440 | 16237 |