The Virtual Lecture Hall Physician CME Website


Using Systematic Procedures to Prevent Medical Errors


Using Systematic Procedures to Prevent Medical Errors
CME Certificate Fee: $25.00 per credit (hour)
AMA/PRA Cat. 1 Credit
2.00 credit(s) / hour(s)

Estimated time to complete this activity:
2.00 hours.

Meets Special CME Requirements in: Connecticut, Florida, Massachusetts, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas     Learn More >>
This course will help you:

Use standardized procedures and checklists to reduce medical errors
Manage informed consent
Utilize rapid response teams
Better approach communication difficulties

Using Systematic Procedures to Prevent Medical Errors
AMA/PRA Cat. 1 Credit: 2.00 credit(s) / hour(s)
Current Approval Period: July 15, 2010 - July 14, 2012
VLH Release Date: July 15, 2010
Most Recent Edit by Author: July 15, 2010
Financial Support Received: None
Accreditation

The Office of Continuing Education, School of Medicine, University of Missouri-Columbia is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

The Office of Continuing Education, School of Medicine, University of Missouri-Columbia designates this educational activity for a maximum of 2.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.


This course was initially released on The VLH on 07-15-10. The term of approval for this course is two years from the date of last review, 07-15-10.

Using Systematic Procedures to Prevent Medical Errors
About the Author and Editor

Author
Leslie W. Hall, MD, FACP is an Associate Professor of Clinical Internal Medicine at the University of Missouri in Columbia. Since 2008, he has served as the Chief Medical Officer for University of Missouri Health Care and as the Senior Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs in the MU School of Medicine. He previously directed University of Missouri Health Care's Office of Clinical Effectiveness. He has led numerous quality improvement teams, and serves as the Director of the Program for Clinical Quality Improvement in the Center for Health Care Quality.

Dr. Hall has developed several curricular offerings in the areas of quality improvement, patient safety and teamwork in health care. From 2005 to 2008, he served as one of two national physician advisors for Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (a Robert Wood Johnson Initiative). His research interests include analysis of the effectiveness of strategies to improve patient safety within hospitals and investigation of outcomes of quality improvement and patient safety education. Dr. Hall's clinical work is as an internal medicine hospitalist.

Disclosure: Dr. Hall states that he does not have any financial arrangements that could constitute a conflict of interest.

Editor
John Harris Jr., MD, MBA is Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine at the College of Medicine of the University of Arizona. He is the President of Medical Directions, Inc. Dr. Harris has served as the Principal Investigator on multiple NIH-funded studies of online CME. He is the Senior Editor of The Virtual Lecture Hall's online CME programs and the author of a number of professional papers dealing with online CME.

Disclosure: Dr. Harris states that he does not have any financial arrangements that could constitute a conflict of interest.

Using Systematic Procedures to Prevent Medical Errors
Ratings (109 responses)
How would you rate this program overall?
Average Rating: 4.58/5.00
How well were the learning objectives of this program met?
Average Rating: 4.61/5.00
How relevant was the information in this program to your clinical practice?
Average Rating: 4.47/5.00
Likelihood you will make a change in practice behavior based on your participation in this activity.
Average Rating: 4.00/5.00
User Comments
by GOVINDARAJ MOHAN | Aug 23, 2010
Excellent course.Nice format.Easy to read
by Hidden | Aug 20, 2010
What is the best way to give check out to your partners when you cover a large inpatient population and shifts cover a 24-hour period from 6 a.m. to 6 a.m.?
view response
by Linda Ray | Aug 15, 2010
NO ONE should order tests or a patient who IS NO BETTER or worse without personal exam and assessment of this patient . TMLT would strongly disagree that"this chronic condition for which to did not initially treat could be decided about on the phone"... This is an example of propaganda ... convincing people they don't need to make a hands on assessment. What is this patient had mastoiditis or neurologic findings? btw i did enjoy this format, just object to the last case
view response
by padmanabha raju mungara | Aug 13, 2010
the course is very enlightining and definetly pivotal in medical practice.
by Michael Mardiney Jr | Jul 30, 2010
Excellent course.
by GARY HEATON | Jul 29, 2010
i was very happy with this course.
Using Systematic Procedures to Prevent Medical Errors
This course meets general AMA Category 1 CME requirements in states that have a CME requirement.

Based on information from state licensing authorities, this program meets special CME requirements in these states:

Connecticut Risk Management
Florida Medical Errors Prevention
This course addresses the five most misdiagnosed conditions during the previous biennium, as well as root cause analysis, error reduction and prevention, and patient safety, as required by the Florida Board of Medicine.
Massachusetts Risk Management
Nevada Ethics
Pennsylvania Risk Management / Patient Safety
Rhode Island Other Regulatory Requirements
Texas Ethics / Professional Responsibility

View other courses meeting Special State Requirements
Using Systematic Procedures to Prevent Medical Errors
Technical Requirements

This activity is offered online and requires a connection to the Internet. The activity works on a PC or Macintosh computer with the browsers Internet Explorer 7.0 and up, Firefox 2.0, AOL 9.x and up, and Safari 2.x and up. JavaScript should be enabled in all browsers, and Popups and first party cookies need to be accepted from www.VLH.com. You should also have the latest, free Adobe Reader installed for reading documents. (AOL dial-up modem users may experience lengthy delays downloading PDF files.)

For additional information, read the Technical Assistance FAQ.

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