Study The value of inking breast cores to reduce specimen mix-up. Citation Text: Renshaw AA, Kish R, Gould EW. The value of inking breast cores to reduce specimen mix-up. Am J Clin Pathol. 2007;127(2):271-2. Copy Citation Format: Google ScholarPubMedBibTeXEndNote X3 XMLEndNote 7 XMLEndnote taggedPubMedIdRIS Download Citation Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL January 14, 2011 Renshaw AA, Kish R, Gould EW. Am J Clin Pathol. 2007;127(2):271-2. View more articles from the same authors. The authors describe a tissue specimen marking mechanism that helped identify discrepancies that could lead to specimen mix-up. PubMed citation Available at Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL Cite Citation Citation Text: Renshaw AA, Kish R, Gould EW. The value of inking breast cores to reduce specimen mix-up. Am J Clin Pathol. 2007;127(2):271-2. Copy Citation Format: Google ScholarPubMedBibTeXEndNote X3 XMLEndNote 7 XMLEndnote taggedPubMedIdRIS Download Citation Related Resources From the Same Author(s) Correlation of workload with disagreement and amendment rates in surgical pathology and nongynecologic cytology. August 10, 2010 Measuring errors in surgical pathology in real-life practice: defining what does and does not matter. January 14, 2011 Interpretive diagnostic error reduction in surgical pathology and cytology: guideline from the College of American Pathologists Pathology and Laboratory Quality Center and the Association of Directors of Anatomic and Surgical Pathology. January 8, 2016 Containing COVID-19 in the emergency department: the role of improved case detection and segregation of suspect cases. June 10, 2020 Clinical communities at Johns Hopkins Medicine: an emerging approach to quality improvement. September 2, 2015 Disruptions in surgical flow and their relationship to surgical errors: an exploratory investigation. January 6, 2012 Application of the human factors analysis and classification system methodology to the cardiovascular surgery operating room. August 26, 2011 Validation of a secondary screener for suicide risk: results from the Emergency Department Safety Assessment and Follow-up Evaluation (ED-SAFE). June 17, 2020 Learning collaboratives: insights and a new taxonomy from AHRQ's two decades of experience. March 7, 2018 Active surveillance of vaccine safety: a system to detect early signs of adverse events. June 23, 2009 View More Related Resources WebM&M Cases Pre-analytical pitfalls: Missing and mislabeled specimens February 26, 2020 The effect of a Lean quality improvement implementation program on surgical pathology specimen accessioning and gross preparation error frequency. September 1, 2012 Voluntary electronic reporting of laboratory errors: an analysis of 37,532 laboratory event reports from 30 health care organizations. April 18, 2012 The safety implications of missed test results for hospitalised patients: a systematic review. March 23, 2012 Surgical specimen identification errors: a new measure of quality in surgical care. August 26, 2011 Decreasing mislabeled laboratory specimens using barcode technology and bedside printers. February 2, 2011 Patient safety in the clinical laboratory: a longitudinal analysis of specimen identification errors. December 22, 2010 Lost surgical specimens, lost opportunities. March 18, 2010 WebM&M Cases Right Patient, Wrong Sample December 1, 2006 Classifying laboratory incident reports to identify problems that jeopardize patient safety. September 7, 2005 View More See More About The Topic Risk Managers Quality and Safety Professionals Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Identification Errors Missed or Critical Lab Results View More
Correlation of workload with disagreement and amendment rates in surgical pathology and nongynecologic cytology. August 10, 2010
Measuring errors in surgical pathology in real-life practice: defining what does and does not matter. January 14, 2011
Interpretive diagnostic error reduction in surgical pathology and cytology: guideline from the College of American Pathologists Pathology and Laboratory Quality Center and the Association of Directors of Anatomic and Surgical Pathology. January 8, 2016
Containing COVID-19 in the emergency department: the role of improved case detection and segregation of suspect cases. June 10, 2020
Clinical communities at Johns Hopkins Medicine: an emerging approach to quality improvement. September 2, 2015
Disruptions in surgical flow and their relationship to surgical errors: an exploratory investigation. January 6, 2012
Application of the human factors analysis and classification system methodology to the cardiovascular surgery operating room. August 26, 2011
Validation of a secondary screener for suicide risk: results from the Emergency Department Safety Assessment and Follow-up Evaluation (ED-SAFE). June 17, 2020
Learning collaboratives: insights and a new taxonomy from AHRQ's two decades of experience. March 7, 2018
Active surveillance of vaccine safety: a system to detect early signs of adverse events. June 23, 2009
The effect of a Lean quality improvement implementation program on surgical pathology specimen accessioning and gross preparation error frequency. September 1, 2012
Voluntary electronic reporting of laboratory errors: an analysis of 37,532 laboratory event reports from 30 health care organizations. April 18, 2012
The safety implications of missed test results for hospitalised patients: a systematic review. March 23, 2012
Decreasing mislabeled laboratory specimens using barcode technology and bedside printers. February 2, 2011
Patient safety in the clinical laboratory: a longitudinal analysis of specimen identification errors. December 22, 2010
Classifying laboratory incident reports to identify problems that jeopardize patient safety. September 7, 2005