Commentary Safe medication prescribing and monitoring in the outpatient setting. Citation Text: Shojania KG. Safe medication prescribing and monitoring in the outpatient setting. Can Med Assoc J. 2006;174(9). doi:10.1503/cmaj.050984. Copy Citation Format: DOIGoogle ScholarBibTeXEndNote X3 XMLEndNote 7 XMLEndnote taggedPubMedIdRIS Download Citation Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL July 26, 2010 Shojania KG. Can Med Assoc J. 2006;174(9). View more articles from the same authors. The author presents three case examples of medication error in ambulatory settings, suggests how to avoid such errors, and provides a table describing common errors during the five stages of medication administration. Free full text PubMed citation Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL Cite Citation Citation Text: Shojania KG. Safe medication prescribing and monitoring in the outpatient setting. Can Med Assoc J. 2006;174(9). doi:10.1503/cmaj.050984. Copy Citation Format: DOIGoogle ScholarBibTeXEndNote X3 XMLEndNote 7 XMLEndnote taggedPubMedIdRIS Download Citation Related Resources From the Same Author(s) Making Health Care Safer II: An Updated Critical Analysis of the Evidence for Patient Safety Practices. January 6, 2018 Expanding the scope of Critical Care Rapid Response Teams: a feasible approach to identify adverse events. A prospective observational cohort. November 20, 2015 Overestimation of clinical diagnostic performance caused by low necropsy rates. April 6, 2011 What happens between visits? Adverse and potential adverse events among a low-income, urban, ambulatory population with diabetes. June 11, 2010 Patient safety at the crossroads. May 5, 2016 A systematic review of interventions to follow-up test results pending at discharge. June 25, 2018 Use of an interactive, telephone-based self-management support program to identify adverse events among ambulatory diabetes patients. February 22, 2011 Clinical problem-solving. Lost in transcription. February 17, 2011 Striving for high reliability in healthcare: a qualitative study of the implementation of a hospital safety programme. June 22, 2022 Advancing the science of patient safety. September 20, 2011 View More Related Resources Patient Safety Innovations Ambulatory Safety Nets to Reduce Missed and Delayed Diagnoses of Cancer July 31, 2023 Annual Perspective Improving Diagnostic Safety and Quality April 26, 2023 ISMP medication error report analysis. June 16, 2019 Promethazine conundrum: IV can hurt more than IM injection! June 5, 2018 Preventing vincristine administration errors. December 23, 2016 Medication prescribing errors involving the route of administration. August 29, 2016 Medication safety issue brief. Bar code implementation strategies. June 17, 2014 Medication safety issue brief. Counterfeit drug prevention and identification. June 17, 2014 Using a preprinted order sheet to reduce prescription errors in a pediatric emergency department: a randomized, controlled trial. May 27, 2011 WebM&M Cases Citrate Mix-Up May 1, 2006 View More See More About The Topic Ambulatory Care Physicians Pharmacists Facility and Group Administrators Risk Managers View More
Making Health Care Safer II: An Updated Critical Analysis of the Evidence for Patient Safety Practices. January 6, 2018
Expanding the scope of Critical Care Rapid Response Teams: a feasible approach to identify adverse events. A prospective observational cohort. November 20, 2015
What happens between visits? Adverse and potential adverse events among a low-income, urban, ambulatory population with diabetes. June 11, 2010
Use of an interactive, telephone-based self-management support program to identify adverse events among ambulatory diabetes patients. February 22, 2011
Striving for high reliability in healthcare: a qualitative study of the implementation of a hospital safety programme. June 22, 2022
Patient Safety Innovations Ambulatory Safety Nets to Reduce Missed and Delayed Diagnoses of Cancer July 31, 2023
Using a preprinted order sheet to reduce prescription errors in a pediatric emergency department: a randomized, controlled trial. May 27, 2011