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Patient safety: Do nursing and medical curricula address this theme?

Wakefield AB, Attree MJ, Braidman IP, Carlisle C, Johnson Martin, Cooke HF

Nurse Education Today. 2005;25:333-340.

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Abstract

In this literature review, we examine to what extent patient safety is addressed within medical and nursing curricula. Patient safety is the foundation of healthcare practice and education both in the UK and internationally. Recent research policy initiatives have highlighted this issue. The paper highlights the significance of this topic as an aspect of study in its own right by examining not only the fiscal by also the human costs such events invite.In the United Kingdom patient safety issues feature prominently in the policy documentation but this is not reflected within the formal curricula guidelines issued by the NMC and GMC. Yet if healthcare educational curricula were to recognise the value of learning from errors, such events could become part of a wider educational resource enabling both students and facilitators to prevent threats to patient safety. For this reason, the paper attempts to articulate why patient safety should be afforded greater prominence within medical and nursing curricula. We argue that learning how to manage errors effectively would enable trainee practitioners to improve patient care, reduce the burden on an overstretched health care system and engage in dynamic as opposed to defensive practice.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
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Publication type:
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Published date:
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Volume:
25
Start page:
333
End page:
340
Pagination:
333-340
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1016/j.nedt.2005.02.004
Access state:
Active

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:1d26459
Created:
2nd September, 2009, 09:11:12
Last modified:
13th August, 2012, 23:50:02

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