Description

Book Synopsis

The vision of HEPS is represented by the bridge connecting the past and future of healthcare services, as well as ergonomists and clinicians, patients and providers. Previous HEPS conferences (Florence 2005 and Strasbourg 2008) successfully contributed to highlight and develop the contribution of ergonomics to patient safety, thanks to the participation of researchers, practitioners and patient advocates.

The third HEPS conference held in Oviedo, Spain from 22-24 June, 2011 was jointly organized by IEA, AEE and SIE and focused on the challenges healthcare ergonomics faces in designing healthcare services as the co-product of the interaction between clinicians and patients. HEPS 2011 deals in particular with specific tracks dedicated to patient centred design of biomedical devices, intelligent information systems and clinical pathways for the acute and chronic conditions.

Oviedo has shown to be an enchanting venue to host HEPS. Its convivial atmosphere has favoured the interactions between ergonomists, clinicians and patients. The scientific contributions and the patient stories successfully intertwined in the plenary and interactive sessions, to finally evolve in a consensus document on healthcare ergonomics and patient safety.



Table of Contents

Foreword
Organization
Main Lectures
Patient handling interventions
People—designing competences for patient safety
Cognitive processes and clinical decision making
Naturalistic decision making and sensemaking process in the clinical teams
Human error in clinical pathways
Healthcare ergonomics litigations
Communicating the healthcare experience
Designing the healthcare experience
Inside stories: The patient’s experience
Designing patients’ participation
Designing competences for patient safety
Elder people and safety
System reliability and patient safety
Resilience engineering for patient safety
Simulation for training
Healthcare quality and ergonomics
Care in hospital, ambulatory settings, long-term care and at home
Organizational culture/climate and patient safety
Error analysis methods
Organizational design of healthcare systems
Clinical risk management and medical performances
Homecare and safety
Evidence based design
Wayfinding and layout
Healthcare architecture and organization
Safety by design
Information technology and learning reporting systems
Design for usability for surgical and medical devices
Healthcare information technology, such as electronic health record, computerized provider order entry, bar coding medication administration
Human-computer interaction and usability
Maintenance of biomedical devices and patient safety
New services and tools for patient safety
Medication errors
Infection control
Risks in OR, ICU and ER
Errors in radiology and laboratory
Patient falls
Methods for benchmarking of the best practices
Occupational stress
Patient handling ergonomics and muscleskeletal disorders
Occupational injuries and accidents
Epidemiological approaches
Miscellaneous

Healthcare Systems Ergonomics and Patient Safety

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 18 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by Sara Albolino, Sebastiano Bagnara, Tommaso Bellandi

1 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Healthcare Systems Ergonomics and Patient Safety by Sara Albolino

    Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
    Publication Date: 02/06/2011
    ISBN13: 9780415684132, 978-0415684132
    ISBN10: 0415684137

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    The vision of HEPS is represented by the bridge connecting the past and future of healthcare services, as well as ergonomists and clinicians, patients and providers. Previous HEPS conferences (Florence 2005 and Strasbourg 2008) successfully contributed to highlight and develop the contribution of ergonomics to patient safety, thanks to the participation of researchers, practitioners and patient advocates.

    The third HEPS conference held in Oviedo, Spain from 22-24 June, 2011 was jointly organized by IEA, AEE and SIE and focused on the challenges healthcare ergonomics faces in designing healthcare services as the co-product of the interaction between clinicians and patients. HEPS 2011 deals in particular with specific tracks dedicated to patient centred design of biomedical devices, intelligent information systems and clinical pathways for the acute and chronic conditions.

    Oviedo has shown to be an enchanting venue to host HEPS. Its convivial atmosphere has favoured the interactions between ergonomists, clinicians and patients. The scientific contributions and the patient stories successfully intertwined in the plenary and interactive sessions, to finally evolve in a consensus document on healthcare ergonomics and patient safety.



    Table of Contents

    Foreword
    Organization
    Main Lectures
    Patient handling interventions
    People—designing competences for patient safety
    Cognitive processes and clinical decision making
    Naturalistic decision making and sensemaking process in the clinical teams
    Human error in clinical pathways
    Healthcare ergonomics litigations
    Communicating the healthcare experience
    Designing the healthcare experience
    Inside stories: The patient’s experience
    Designing patients’ participation
    Designing competences for patient safety
    Elder people and safety
    System reliability and patient safety
    Resilience engineering for patient safety
    Simulation for training
    Healthcare quality and ergonomics
    Care in hospital, ambulatory settings, long-term care and at home
    Organizational culture/climate and patient safety
    Error analysis methods
    Organizational design of healthcare systems
    Clinical risk management and medical performances
    Homecare and safety
    Evidence based design
    Wayfinding and layout
    Healthcare architecture and organization
    Safety by design
    Information technology and learning reporting systems
    Design for usability for surgical and medical devices
    Healthcare information technology, such as electronic health record, computerized provider order entry, bar coding medication administration
    Human-computer interaction and usability
    Maintenance of biomedical devices and patient safety
    New services and tools for patient safety
    Medication errors
    Infection control
    Risks in OR, ICU and ER
    Errors in radiology and laboratory
    Patient falls
    Methods for benchmarking of the best practices
    Occupational stress
    Patient handling ergonomics and muscleskeletal disorders
    Occupational injuries and accidents
    Epidemiological approaches
    Miscellaneous

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