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SAFETY IN NURSING HOME |
Correspondence to:
M B Kapp, Office of Geriatric Medicine & Gerontology, Wright State University School of Medicine, Box 927, Dayton, OH 45401-0927, USA;
marshall.kapp{at}wright.edu
ABSTRACT
When family members admit a loved one to a nursing home, they expect that the facility will assure the physical safety of the residents. However, this does not always occur. Safety concerns persisting in at least some modern American nursing homes involve adverse drug events, injurious falls, pressure ulcers, problems with tube feeding, faulty communications or other breakdowns during transfer to or from hospital, and equipment breakdowns or mix-ups. The adversarial legal, economic, political, and media environment surrounding the US nursing home industry poses serious practical impediments to alleviating these safety concerns more effectively. However, resident safety comprises only one part of the larger quality improvement picture in the nursing home context. While the threat of negative legal repercussions may be necessary to address safety issues, a fuller concern about improving the quality of care and quality of life for nursing home residents will also involve the development and implementation of a combination of positive incentives for facilities to do better.
Keywords: nursing homes; patient safety; quality of care
Relevant Articles
Qual. Saf. Health Care 2003 12: 166-167.
Qual. Saf. Health Care 2003 12: 236.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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C. M. Hughes and K. L. Lapane Nurses' and nursing assistants' perceptions of patient safety culture in nursing homes Int. J. Qual. Health Care, August 1, 2006; 18(4): 281 - 286. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A Ryan Rights, risks, and autonomy: a new interpretation of falls in nursing homes Qual. Saf. Health Care, June 1, 2003; 12(3): 166 - 167. [Full Text] |
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