Newspaper/Magazine Article Hospitals find confession good for the bottom line. Citation Text: Hospitals find confession good for the bottom line. Greene J. Copy Citation Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL May 27, 2009 Greene J. View more articles from the same authors. This news article discusses apology teams at Michigan hospitals and how their disclosure efforts have reduced malpractice costs. Free full text Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL Cite Citation Citation Text: Hospitals find confession good for the bottom line. Greene J. Copy Citation Related Resources From the Same Author(s) AHRQ Nursing Home Survey on Patient Safety Culture: 2016 User Comparative Database Report. November 23, 2016 More families hear apologies following medical mistakes. November 21, 2016 Nurse error spotlights drug's danger. June 28, 2006 Building patient trust in hospitals: a combination of hospital-related factors and health care clinician behaviors. October 27, 2021 Routine multidisciplinary review of severe maternal morbidity is associated with a reduction in preventable cases of severe maternal morbidity. March 30, 2022 Supporting a psychiatric hospital culture of safety. November 21, 2012 More than words: patients' views on apology and disclosure when things go wrong in cancer care. March 11, 2013 Surgeons must tell patients of double-booked surgeries, new guidelines say. April 27, 2016 Achieving an Exceptional Patient and Family Experience of Inpatient Hospital Care. November 21, 2016 Addressing the Opioid Crisis in the United States. November 2, 2016 View More Related Resources Transparency and public reporting are essential for a safe health care system. October 3, 2017 Medicare's policy not to pay for treating hospital-acquired conditions: the impact. February 10, 2015 A perinatal care quality and safety initiative: are there financial rewards for improved quality? September 9, 2013 The economics of health care quality and medical errors. December 31, 2012 Effect of nonpayment for hospital-acquired, catheter–associated urinary tract infection: a statewide analysis. September 19, 2012 Financial incentives to promote health care quality: the hospital acquired conditions nonpayment policy. September 21, 2011 Making inpatient medication reconciliation patient centered, clinically relevant and implementable: a consensus statement on key principles and necessary first steps. October 27, 2010 Insurers stop paying for care linked to errors. January 30, 2008 Many Mass. hospitals will pay for errors. November 28, 2007 Minnesota is first state with policy to stop billing after medical errors. October 3, 2007 View More See More About The Topic Hospitals Health Care Executives and Administrators Policy Makers General Internal Medicine Hospital Medicine View More
AHRQ Nursing Home Survey on Patient Safety Culture: 2016 User Comparative Database Report. November 23, 2016
Building patient trust in hospitals: a combination of hospital-related factors and health care clinician behaviors. October 27, 2021
Routine multidisciplinary review of severe maternal morbidity is associated with a reduction in preventable cases of severe maternal morbidity. March 30, 2022
More than words: patients' views on apology and disclosure when things go wrong in cancer care. March 11, 2013
Medicare's policy not to pay for treating hospital-acquired conditions: the impact. February 10, 2015
A perinatal care quality and safety initiative: are there financial rewards for improved quality? September 9, 2013
Effect of nonpayment for hospital-acquired, catheter–associated urinary tract infection: a statewide analysis. September 19, 2012
Financial incentives to promote health care quality: the hospital acquired conditions nonpayment policy. September 21, 2011
Making inpatient medication reconciliation patient centered, clinically relevant and implementable: a consensus statement on key principles and necessary first steps. October 27, 2010