Monitoring mortality rates in general practice after Shipman

scientific article

Monitoring mortality rates in general practice after Shipman is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1136/BMJ.326.7383.274
P8608Fatcat IDrelease_djz7ukaze5ddto7npwah74u4gm
P932PMC publication ID1125127
P698PubMed publication ID12560285

P50authorRachel BakerQ50614573
P2093author name stringDavid R Jones
Peter Goldblatt
P2860cites workComparison of UK paediatric cardiac surgical performance by analysis of routinely collected data 1984-96: was Bristol an outlier?Q30657475
Use of cumulative mortality data in patients with acute myocardial infarction for early detection of variation in clinical practice: observational studyQ30658310
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Statistical assessment of the learning curves of health technologiesQ34229843
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Preventable deaths: 16 year study of consecutive deaths in a village in IsraelQ34370683
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A preliminary taxonomy of medical errors in family practiceQ35525286
A method of creating a death register for general practiceQ36598076
Mortality variations as a measure of general practitioner performance: implications of the Shipman caseQ37311812
Decision validity should determine whether a generic or condition-specific HRQOL measure is used in health care decisions.Q38977435
Local confidential inquiry into avoidable factors in deaths from stroke and hypertensive diseaseQ40432219
Use facilitated case discussions for significant event auditing.Q40459057
Evaluation of death registers in general practice.Q40595770
Risk-adjusted sequential probability ratio tests: applications to Bristol, Shipman and adult cardiac surgery.Q50715733
The use of the Cusum technique in the assessment of trainee competence in new procedures.Q51372759
A comparison of a Bayesian vs. a frequentist method for profiling hospital performance.Q52067191
Bristol, Shipman, and clinical governance: Shewhart's forgotten lessonsQ57556150
Monitoring surgical performance using risk-adjusted cumulative sum chartsQ73838432
P433issue7383
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P1104number of pages3
P304page(s)274-276
P577publication date2003-02-01
P1433published inThe BMJQ546003
P1476titleMonitoring mortality rates in general practice after Shipman
P478volume326

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q42529608A practical method for monitoring general practice mortality in the UK: findings from a pilot study in a health board of Northern Ireland
Q30939018An investigation into general practitioners associated with high patient mortality flagged up through the Shipman inquiry: retrospective analysis of routine data
Q42529657Can mortality monitoring in general practice be made to work?
Q47679050Following Shipman: a pilot system for monitoring mortality rates in primary care
Q42783097Involving community may be way forward post-Shipman
Q35526578Is it possible and worth keeping track of deaths within general practice? Results of a 15 year observational study
Q37256568Modelling factors in primary care quality improvement: a cross-sectional study of premature CHD mortality
Q64134226Monitoring mortality events associated with individual physicians and practices
Q36602939Population characteristics, mechanisms of primary care and premature mortality in England: a cross-sectional study
Q33301423Primary healthcare teams' views on using mortality data to review clinical policies
Q36732774Routine mortality monitoring for detecting mass murder in UK general practice: test of effectiveness using modelling
Q33200932Use and misuse of process and outcome data in managing performance of acute medical care: avoiding institutional stigma

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