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Author's Very Short Introduction: Minimizing Errors in Medicine | p. xv |
Putting Medical Error in Context: Minimizing Errors in Medicine-Beyond the ôOops!ö Factor | p. 1 |
Executive Summary | p. 1 |
Thoughts to Think About | p. 2 |
Introductory Comments: Errors as Part of Advances in Medicine | p. 4 |
How to View Medical Errors Today | p. 4 |
What Is Covered in This Book | p. 6 |
Considering the Medical Error Problem in Light of Recent Experience | p. 6 |
Medical Error and Patient Safety | p. 9 |
How This Book Might Contribute to the Present State of Human Error Experience and Patient Safety | p. 10 |
References | p. 11 |
The Valued Legacy of Error and Harm in General: Error and Harm across General Human Experience in Nonmedical Domains-Welcome to Lathology | p. 15 |
Executive Summary | p. 15 |
Thoughts to Think About | p. 16 |
Introductory Comments | p. 17 |
A Brief History of Recent Human Error Experience | p. 18 |
Definition of Human Error and Other Related Terms | p. 19 |
Note about Heterogeneity of Terms | p. 20 |
Note about Error versus Accident | p. 20 |
Note regarding Error versus Adverse Effect | p. 26 |
Taxonomy of Error | p. 26 |
Person versus System | p. 27 |
Planning versus Execution | p. 27 |
Expertise, Its Quality, and Uses | p. 28 |
Cognition and Cognitive Process as a Core Source of Error and of Its Understanding and Control | p. 28 |
Models of Error, Their Development, and Contributing Sites and Entities in Context | p. 30 |
Person-Oriented Models | p. 30 |
Rasmussen's Model of Human Activity in Relation to Error | p. 31 |
Person-Related Errors in the Domain of Skills, Rules, and Knowledge | p. 33 |
Models of Reasoning and Decision Making Related to Informal Logic and Critical Thinking: Aristotle, Toulmin, Heuristics | p. 33 |
Argument and Argumentation Models in Optimal Conditions | p. 34 |
System Functioning-Oriented Models, or ôOne Thing Goes with and Leads to Anotherö | p. 40 |
A Practical Example of an Erroneous Event and of Its Steps as Seen through Their Identification in Various Taxonomies of Error | p. 41 |
An Epidemiological Approach to the Error Problem | p. 42 |
A Word about. Root Cause Analysis and Research | p. 44 |
Beyond Epidemiology: Other Models of Search for Causes | p. 45 |
Epidemiological Implications of the Error Analysis Problem | p. 46 |
Thought Experiment: A Complement to Epidemiology? | p. 47 |
Implications in the Search for Understanding, Control and Prevention of Error Today | p. 47 |
In the Research Domain | p. 48 |
In the Control and Prevention Domains | p. 49 |
Conclusions: Ensuing State of the Human Error Domain Today | p. 49 |
References | p. 51 |
Error and Harm in Health Sciences: Defining and Classifying Human Error and Its Consequences in Clinical and Community Settings | p. 57 |
Executive Summary | p. 57 |
Thoughts to Think About | p. 58 |
Introductory Comments | p. 59 |
Overview of Our Understanding of Error Today | p. 60 |
Overview of Approaches to Error in Medicine | p. 61 |
Definitions of Medical Error, Associated Entities, Terms | p. 62 |
Current Definitions of Medical Error and Medical Harm | p. 63 |
Associated Entities, Terms, and Their Definitions | p. 64 |
Critical Incident, Error, Harm: Comments on Current Terms Used in Medical Lathology | p. 71 |
Variables and Their Taxonomy in the Medical Error Domain | p. 73 |
Migration of Error Taxonomy from Industry to Health Sciences: An Example | p. 74 |
Medical Error and Related Factors and Variables: Other Approaches | p. 74 |
Taxonomy by Types, Circumstances and Conditions, Consequences, and Corrections of Medical Error | p. 77 |
Slips and Mistake-Related Taxonomy | p. 77 |
Clinical Factors and Specialty-Oriented Taxonomies | p. 80 |
Exhaustive and Multi-Axial Taxonomies | p. 81 |
Notes about Related Variables and Contributing and Mitigating Factors | p. 83 |
Note about Related Variables | p. 84 |
Note about Contributing and Mitigating Factors | p. 84 |
Conclusions: Implications of Definitions and Taxonomy for Research and Management of the Medical Error Domain | p. 85 |
References | p. 88 |
Describing Medical Error and Harm: Their Occurrence and Nature in Clinical and Community Settings | p. 93 |
Executive Summary | p. 93 |
Thoughts to Think About | p. 94 |
Introductory Comments | p. 95 |
Research, Knowledge Acquisition, and Intervention Strategies in the General Error Domain as Viewed by a Methodologically Minded Physician Epidemiologist | p. 96 |
Descriptions of Single Cases, Small Sets of Error Cases, and Harm Cases | p. 100 |
Choosing a Research or Intervention Subject | p. 100 |
Reporting Unique, Infrequent, or Rare Cases beyond the Customary Methods of Clinical Practice: Case-Based Qualitative Research and Narrative Methods in the Area of Quality Improvement | p. 103 |
Qualitative Research | p. 103 |
Case Studies of Medical Error and Harm | p. 105 |
Two Examples of Qualitative Research in Medicine and in the Domain of Medical Error | p. 107 |
Reporting Single Cases of Error and Harm the ôMedicalö Way | p. 108 |
Reporting Case Series of Error and Harm | p. 110 |
Back to Epidemiology: What Happens Now? Occurrence Studies, Descriptive Epidemiology, Magnitude, and Distribution (ôin Whom, Where, and Whenö) of the Error and Harm Problem | p. 112 |
A Short Epidemiological Reminder | p. 112 |
Incident and Incidence | p. 113 |
Risk and Hazard | p. 114 |
Error and Harm Reporting in Hospital Care | p. 114 |
Error and Harm Reporting in Primary Care | p. 115 |
Guidelines for Describing and Reporting Medical Error and Harm Occurrence | p. 116 |
Conclusion | p. 119 |
References | p. 121 |
Analyzing Medical Error and Harm: Searching for Their Causes and Consequences | p. 127 |
Executive Summary | p. 127 |
Thoughts to Think About | p. 128 |
Introductory Comments | p. 130 |
Searching for ôNewö (Not Yet Known) Causes and Consequences of Medical Error and Harm: Etiological Research, Analytical Observational Epidemiology | p. 131 |
Challenge of Deriving Cause-Effect Relationships from One or Very Few Observations: An A Priori Causal Attribution | p. 139 |
Challenges of Limited Causal Proof or Causes Yet to Be Established | p. 139 |
Is It Possible to Estimate and Analyze Probabilities of Rare Events? | p. 140 |
Single-Error Event or Few Error Events Reporting | p. 142 |
Offbeat Searches for Causes: Siding with Mainstream Epidemiological Experience | p. 142 |
Root Cause Analysis in the Health Domain | p. 143 |
Other Approaches to Cause-Effect Studies in Lathology through Observational Methods | p. 149 |
Causal Trees | p. 149 |
Probabilistic Risk Analysis | p. 151 |
Significant-Event Analysis | p. 152 |
Systems Analysis: Beyond Incident Reports and Root Cause Analysis | p. 153 |
Experimental Demonstration of Medical Error and Harm Causes and Its Compromises and Alternatives | p. 155 |
No Experimentation or Observational Research Is Feasible? Thought Experiment (ôWhat Ifö Reasoning) to the Rescue | p. 155 |
A Word about Modeling in Epidemiology and Lathology | p. 156 |
Is the Mainstream Epidemiological Methodology of Causal Research Feasible in the Domain of Medical Error and Harm? | p. 157 |
Conclusions | p. 158 |
References | p. 161 |
Flaws in Operator Reasoning and Decision Malting Underlying Medical Error and Harm | p. 167 |
Executive Summary | p. 167 |
Thoughts to Think About | p. 168 |
Introductory Comments | p. 170 |
Note about Medical Error and Medical Harm | p. 171 |
System Error versus Individual Human Error | p. 172 |
Reminder regarding Some Fundamental Considerations | p. 173 |
Flawed Argumentation and Reasoning as Sites and Generators of Error and Harm: Argumentation and Human Error and Harm Analysis from a Logical Perspective | p. 175 |
Mistakes and Errors in Medical Lathology | p. 178 |
Fallacies, Biases, and Cognitive Errors in Medical Lathology | p. 179 |
Where and When Errors Occur: Cognitive Pathways as Sites of Error | p. 181 |
Reviewing Diagnoses: Searching for Errors in the Clinimetric Process | p. 182 |
Reviewing the: Path from Diagnosis to Treatment Decisions and Orders | p. 188 |
Reviewing Decisions as Sources of Error and Harm | p. 188 |
Reviewing Actions as Sources of Error and Harm | p. 190 |
Obtaining Results and Evaluating Their Impact | p. 192 |
Errors in Making Prognoses | p. 193 |
Follow-up, Surveillance, Forecasting-Related Errors | p. 194 |
Conclusions | p. 195 |
References | p. 199 |
Prevention, Intervention, and Control of Medical Error and Harm: Clinical Epidemiological Considerations of Actions and Their Evaluation | p. 203 |
Executive Summary | p. 203 |
Thoughts to Think About | p. 204 |
Introductory Comments, Interventions in the Medical Error Domain | p. 206 |
Basic Definitions, Concepts, and Strategies of Intervention in Lathology | p. 207 |
Two Complementary Strategies: Human Error and System Failures | p. 209 |
Evaluation of Activities in Lathology | p. 210 |
Control of Medical Error and Harm | p. 211 |
Prevention of Medical Error and Harm | p. 211 |
Protection of Freedom from Medical Error and Harm | p. 212 |
Promotion of Freedom from Medical Error and Harm | p. 212 |
Basic Angles of Evaluation in Lathology: Structure, Process, Outcomes, and Other Subjects to Evaluate | p. 212 |
What Should Be Evaluated at the Individual Level: Knowledge, Attitudes, and Skills | p. 213 |
Experimental, Quasi-Experimental, and Nonexperimental Evaluation of Interventions to Understand and Better Control Medical Error and Harm Problems | p. 215 |
Randomized or Otherwise Controlled Clinical Trials | p. 216 |
Natural Experiment | p. 217 |
Before-After Studies | p. 219 |
Case Studies | p. 220 |
Healthcare Failure Mode and Effect Analysis (HFMEA) | p. 221 |
Systematic Reviews of Evidence | p. 225 |
Conclusions and Recommendations | p. 225 |
References | p. 227 |
Taking Medical Error and Harm to Court: Contributions and Expectations of Physicians in Tort Litigation and Legal Decision Making | p. 231 |
Executive Summary | p. 231 |
Thoughts to Think About | p. 232 |
Introductory Comments | p. 234 |
Medical, Surgical, and Public Health Malpractice Claims and Litigation | p. 237 |
Medical and Surgical Malpractice | p. 237 |
Public Health Malpractice | p. 238 |
Language of Medicine and Law | p. 239 |
General Philosophy and Strategies of Medicine and Law | p. 241 |
Law Process and Its Stages | p. 241 |
Happenings and Events before the Trial | p. 241 |
At the Trial | p. 257 |
After the Trial | p. 258 |
Cause-Effect Relationships in Medicine and Law | p. 258 |
Physicians' Roles in the Judicial Search for Causes | p. 260 |
Is the Causal Link under Review Strong and Specific Enough? | p. 262 |
What Is Sufficient and Best Proof for Physicians and Lawyers? | p. 262 |
What Do Physicians Think? | p. 262 |
What Do Lawyers Think? | p. 263 |
Disease versus Individual-Case Causes: Error as an Entity (in General) and in Specific Cases | p. 265 |
Litigating the Argumentative Way | p. 266 |
Disclosure of Medical Errors: Working in Law and Epidemiology with What Is Available | p. 268 |
A Difficult Mix: Medicine, Ethics, and Law | p. 270 |
Conclusions | p. 271 |
References | p. 273 |
Conclusions | p. 279 |
A Brief and (Hopefully) Harmonized Glossary | p. 289 |
List of Cognitive Biases | p. 309 |
List of Fallacies | p. 319 |
Medical Error and Harm-Related Case Report | p. 329 |
About the Author | p. 333 |
Index | p. 335 |
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