Journal ArticleDOI
Voluntary Medication Error Reporting by ED Nurses: Examining the Association With Work Environment and Social Capital
TLDR
Examining the relationship among work environment (nurse manager leadership style and safety climate), social capital (warmth and belonging relationships and organizational trust), and nurses’ willingness to report medication errors found ED nurse managers can modify their leadership style to encourage error reporting.About:
This article is published in Journal of Emergency Nursing.The article was published on 2017-05-01. It has received 18 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Leadership style & Transactional leadership.read more
Citations
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Tolerating errors in hospitality organizations: relationships with learning behavior, error reporting and service recovery performance
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relationship between error tolerance and hospitality employees' three critical work behaviors, namely, learning behavior, error reporting and service recovery performance, and found that error tolerance had direct positive relationships with employees' psychological safety and self-efficacy, both of which had positive impacts on learning behavior and error reporting.
Journal ArticleDOI
Factors related to medication errors in the preparation and administration of intravenous medication in the hospital environment
Verónica V. Márquez-Hernández,Ana Luisa Fuentes-Colmenero,Felipe Cañadas-Núñez,Marco Di Muzio,Noemi Giannetta,Lorena Gutiérrez-Puertas +5 more
TL;DR: The knowledge, attitudes and behavior questionnaire has a satisfactory internal consistency in order to be applied to the Spanish context and seems to have an impact on medication errors prevention.
Journal ArticleDOI
Common Barriers to Reporting Medical Errors.
Salim Aljabari,Zuhal Kadhim +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors systematically reviewed the literature by searching the MEDLINE and SCOPUS databases for studies on barriers to reporting medical errors and found that the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses guideline was followed in selecting eligible studies.
Journal ArticleDOI
Employee mindfulness and creativity: when emotions and national culture matter
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examined how emotions might influence the mindfulness and creativity relationship from different cultural perspectives and found that creativity positively influences service recovery performance and error reporting across the three countries, the Philippines, Turkey, and the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Paradox of Safety in Medication Management
TL;DR: Understanding the complexity of this process and the roles of involved personnel reminds us that there is presently no fool-proof plan for the reduction of medication errors and implies a culture of safety remains elusive.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
An Integrative Model of Organizational Trust: Past, Present, and Future
TL;DR: A considerable amount of research has examined trust since the 1995 publication of as discussed by the authors, and a number of the critical issues that we addressed and provided clarifications and extensions of the topics of levels of analysis, time, control systems, reciprocity, and measurement.
Journal ArticleDOI
New work attitude measures of trust, organizational commitment and personal need non‐fulfilment
John Cook,Toby D. Wall +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented psychometric data in support of seven new measures covering work involvement, intrinsic job motivation, higher order need strength, perceived intrinsic job characteristics, self-rated anxiety, job satisfaction and life satisfaction.
Journal ArticleDOI
Medical error—the third leading cause of death in the US
Martin A. Makary,Michael Daniel +1 more
TL;DR: Medical error is not included on death certificates or in rankings of cause of death, but its contribution to mortality and call for better reporting are assessed.
Journal Article
National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey: 2006 emergency department summary.
TL;DR: The number of visits considered emergent or urgent (15.9 million) did not change significantly from 2005, nor did the number of patients arriving by ambulance (18.4 million).
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Factors associated with reporting of medication errors by Israeli nurses.
Ilya Kagan,Sivia Barnoy +1 more