Limiting Harm in Health Care highlights the potential for unnecessary harm in health care practice. This harm is mostly unintentional, but it can result from many different aspects of medical treatment in a wide range of practice areas. Adverse events, events or omissions during clinical care resulting in physical or psychological injury, are increasingly being recognised as significant problems in health care. Following clarification of the nature and extent of medical harm in health care, separate chapters explore the potential for medical harm in diverse areas of practice. Topics include problems in the use of medication, the treatment of acute heart disease, the role of hospital routine and the potentially negative role of medically dominated treatment in mental illness and palliative care. The book includes recommendations for reducing unnecessary harm within the expanding boundaries of nursing practice. The reader is challenged to assess the potential risks inherent in the health care system, to reconsider established methods of treatment, and to re-examine professional working relationships.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
'A highly original book, where the authors succeed in taking a broad approach to the notion of risk within healthcare. It stipulates a nursing perspective but would be equally valid to a wider inter-professional audience.'
Accident and Emergency Nursing
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Maße
Höhe: 22 mm
Breite: 176 mm
Dicke: 256 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-632-05996-6 (9780632059966)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Frank Milligan is the editor of Limiting Harm in Health Care: A Nursing Perspective, published by Wiley.
Kate Robinson is the editor of Limiting Harm in Health Care: A Nursing Perspective, published by Wiley.
Herausgeber*in
SENIOR TEACHING FELLOW, UNIVERSITY OF LUTON
SENIOR PRO-VICE CHANCELLOR, UNIVERSITY OF LUTON
Maps, medicine, nurses and health care; Defining medicine, nursing and the nature of iatrogenesis; Health professions, power, knowledge and expertise, Shifting boundaries in current nursing practice; The hidden harm of drug therapy; Drugging family therapy- shifts in the care of hyperactive children; Talking harm- the medicalization of mental health practice; Disabling professions- the lay perspective; Lessons on managing risk- the medical experience; Nurse diagnosed myocardial infarction- hidden nurse work and iatrogenic risk; Talking death , talking harm; NHS Direct- the impact of information technology and shifting nurse roles; Repercussions and possible future trends- limiting iatrogenic harm.