Volume 3
Advanced Practices in Nursing
ISSN: 2573-0347
Clinical Nursing 2018
August 29-30, 2018
Page 39
Notes:
conference
series
.com
August 29-30, 2018 | Zurich, Switzerland
17
th
World Congress on
Clinical Nursing & Practice
Jeong-Ah Kim, Adv Practice Nurs 2018, Volume 3
DOI: 10.4172/2573-0347-C6-031
Predictive risk for patient safety culture
Medical errors impact up to 440,000 people’s lives, per year in the US, with more people dying frommedical errors each year than
highway accidents, breast cancer, or AIDS combined. This makes medical errors the third leading cause of death in the US alone,
after cancer and heart disease, and are responsible for 11% of all deaths in Australia. In other words, medical errors in western
healthcare has been implicated in more than 5 million deaths, contributed to the disability-adjusted life years of more than 20
million people and had cost healthcare approximately $1 trillion over the past decade. Health care services are yet to recognise and
appreciate such measurable approaches and continue to rely on post mortem or misadventure examinations. This has contributed
to a restricted, deficient or non-existent database that can provide predictive measurements of healthcare incidents, or calculate
quality intervention relationships between organisational determinants and clinical outcomes. A systematic review of the patient
safety culture within health care settings was undertaken to examine and provide a deeper understanding of the significance of
predictive measurement of organisational factors to enhance the culture of patient safety. In doing so, solutions are provided
that may address organisational culture challenges. These include actions that organizations can undertake to identify, measure
and adopt innovative safety and quality improvement strategies. Further, it is highlighted how to initiate, maintain and sustain a
culture of organisational safety through a predictive measure of the risks that closes the gap between patient safety and health care
delivery.
Biography
Jeong-Ah Kim is a Registered Nurse. She has completed a MPH in Public Health and PhD in Occupational Health Management System at Queensland University of
Technology, Australia. She is the winner of the National Award for Excellence in PhD. She is a Lecturer at Federation University with an expertise in the field of nursing,
public and occupational health and patient safety for the last 20 years
Jeong-Ah Kim
Federation University, Australia