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Health Professions Education: A Bridge to Quality

TLDR
Health Professions Education: A Bridge to Quality is the follow up to that summit, held in June 2002, where 150 participants across disciplines and occupations developed ideas about how to integrate a core set of competencies into health professions education.
Abstract
The Institute of Medicine study Crossing the Quality Chasm (2001) recommended that an interdisciplinary summit be held to further reform of health professions education in order to enhance quality and patient safety. Health Professions Education: A Bridge to Quality is the follow up to that summit, held in June 2002, where 150 participants across disciplines and occupations developed ideas about how to integrate a core set of competencies into health professions education. These core competencies include patient-centered care, interdisciplinary teams, evidence-based practice, quality improvement, and informatics. This book recommends a mix of approaches to health education improvement, including those related to oversight processes, the training environment, research, public reporting, and leadership. Educators, administrators, and health professionals can use this book to help achieve an approach to education that better prepares clinicians to meet both the needs of patients and the requirements of a changing health care system.

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Health and biomedical informatics: opportunities and challenges for a twenty-first century profession and its education.

TL;DR: Characterize the health and biomedical informatics workforce, its professionalization, and its education and suggest continued efforts must be made to characterize and understand the optimal organization and education of this workforce.
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Clinical nurses' perception of continuing professional education as a tool for quality service delivery in public hospitals Calabar, Cross River State, Nigeria

TL;DR: It is recommended that nurse leaders in Nigeria should develop online CPE modules for nursing, and allocate points to them so that participation may contribute to career progression and effective monitoring and evaluation systems should be put in place to assess impact of CPE on staff competence and patient outcomes.
Posted Content

Torts, expertise, and authority: liability of physicians and managed care organizations.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined optimal individual and entity-level liability for medical malpractice when expected accident costs depend on both the agent's level of expertise and the principal's levels of authority.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simulation and team training.

TL;DR: A framework for considering simulation- based training is presented, contextual factors and the outcomes of research conducted to date are examined, and suggestions for selecting simulation-based approaches for developing obstetrics and gynecology teams in multiple contexts are provided.
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Virtual Simulations across Curriculum Prepare Nursing Students for Patient Interviews

TL;DR: A multiyear evolution of the use of virtual environment simulations to improve communication and subjective assessment skills of prelicensure baccalaureate nursing students is detailed.
References
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BookDOI

To Err Is Human Building a Safer Health System

TL;DR: Boken presenterer en helhetlig strategi for hvordan myndigheter, helsepersonell, industri og forbrukere kan redusere medisinske feil.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century

Alastair Baker
- 17 Nov 2001 - 
TL;DR: Analyzing health care organizations as complex systems, Crossing the Quality Chasm also documents the causes of the quality gap, identifies current practices that impede quality care, and explores how systems approaches can be used to implement change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving Chronic Illness Care: Translating Evidence Into Action

TL;DR: The CCM is described, its use in intensive quality improvement activities with more than 100 health care organizations, and insights gained in the process are described, to guide quality improvement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving Primary Care for Patients With Chronic Illness

TL;DR: The chronic care model is a guide to higher-quality chronic illness management within primary care and predicts that improvement in its 6 interrelated components can produce system reform in which informed, activated patients interact with prepared, proactive practice teams.
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