Nursing Errors

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In the healthcare industry, nursing errors exemplify a serious public health dilemma and present a critical threat to the safety of patients. The IOM [1] (Institute of Medicine) report entitled “To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System”, suspected that between 45,000-98,000 Americans die each year as a result of medical errors. This report induced arguments in the medical community of how to decrease nursing errors and increase patient safety in the best way possible. Nursing errors are an inevitable part of the practice of medicine. According to John Hopkins medicine article, [2] studies suggest that medical errors are now the third leading cause of death in the U.S. An establishment of moral and ethical standard comes from the disclosure of medical errors to patients. This is one thing that can’t be ignored when implementing solutions to improve the situation. Rathert and Phillips [3] highlight on the significance of managing ethical environments in health-care organizations. According to Rathert and Phillips [3], aggressive management of organizational ethics in healthcare organizations is crucial. …show more content…

Admitting the fact that medical errors are not usually caused by the negligent or incompetent healthcare professionals, Crane and Crane [4] noted that “medical errors are a direct result of how the health system is organized and how care is delivered”. Crane and Crane [4] credited the cause of medical errors to the uneven framework of old article systems that are greatly fluctuating and error liable, as well as patients medical records that are and patient’s medical information, dispersed throughout database, that can be kept at different healthcare providers locations. In addition, the obscured handwritten orders and prescriptions from physicians were accredited to the cause of medical errors

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