sábado, 24 de diciembre de 2016

WebM&M Cases | Suicidal Ideation in the Family Medicine Clinic | AHRQ Patient Safety Network

Suicidal Ideation in the Family Medicine Clinic | AHRQ Patient Safety Network
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WebM&M Cases

  • SPOTLIGHT CASE
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  • CME/CEU
Commentary by Christine Moutier, MD
A young woman with a history of suicide attempts called her primary care physician's office in the morning saying that she had been cutting herself and had taken extra doses of medication. The receptionist scheduled the patient for an appointment late that afternoon. After the clinic visit, while awaiting transfer to the emergency department for evaluation and admission, the patient was left unattended and eloped before providers could evaluate her.
Commentary by Gregory A. Filice, MD
An older woman experienced acute kidney injury after being prescribed a nephrotoxic medication (amphotericin) intended for the ICU patient in the next bed. Caring for both patients, the covering resident entered the medication order for the wrong patient despite a policy requiring infectious disease consultation to prescribe IV amphotericin.
Commentary by Chris Vincent, PhD
Admitted to the hospital for treatment of a hip fracture, an elderly woman with end-stage dementia was placed on the hospice service for comfort care. The physician ordered a morphine drip for better pain control. The nurse placed the normal saline, but not the morphine drip, on a pump. Due to the mistaken setup, the morphine flowed into the patient at uncontrolled rate.

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