Patient safety in the operating theatre: how A3 thinking can help reduce door movement

scientific article published on 3 April 2014

Patient safety in the operating theatre: how A3 thinking can help reduce door movement is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1093/INTQHC/MZU033
P698PubMed publication ID24699198
P5875ResearchGate publication ID261371589

P2093author name stringGuy A M Widdershoven
Merel Visse
Kjeld Harald Aij
Frederique Elisabeth Simons
P2860cites workLean methodology in health careQ30391245
Operating room traffic: is there any role of monitoring it?Q41889025
Operating room traffic is a major concern during total joint arthroplastyQ42118644
Cardiac surgical theatre traffic: time for traffic calming measures?Q52848270
Traffic flow in the operating room: an explorative and descriptive study on air quality during orthopedic trauma implant surgeryQ57111435
Measurement of Foot Traffic in the Operating Room: Implications for Infection ControlQ57653132
P433issue4
P304page(s)366-371
P577publication date2014-04-03
P1433published inInternational Journal for Quality in Health CareQ15749975
P1476titlePatient safety in the operating theatre: how A3 thinking can help reduce door movement
P478volume26

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q45357806Effectiveness of facilitated introduction of a standard operating procedure into routine processes in the operating theatre: a controlled interrupted time series
Q64270562Improvement in staff behavior during surgical procedures to prevent post-operative complications (ARIBO): study protocol for a cluster randomised trial
Q26774765Lean interventions in healthcare: do they actually work? A systematic literature review
Q45302079Narrative feedback from OR personnel about the safety of their surgical practice before and after a surgical safety checklist intervention

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