Incident reporting behaviours following the Francis report: A cross-sectional survey

scientific article published on 17 November 2017

Incident reporting behaviours following the Francis report: A cross-sectional survey is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1111/JEP.12849
P698PubMed publication ID29148154

P50authorGareth ArcherQ96179151
P2093author name stringAlison Colhoun
P2860cites workEnhancing public safety in primary careQ30857104
Barriers to incident reportingQ35524628
Barriers to incident reporting in a healthcare systemQ35524881
Improving incident reporting among junior doctorsQ36282235
Evaluation of an intervention aimed at improving voluntary incident reporting in hospitalsQ36767481
Feedback from incident reporting: information and action to improve patient safetyQ37388916
Critical incident reporting and learningQ37765355
The problem with incident reportingQ38582659
Junior doctors' views on reporting concerns about patient safety: a qualitative study.Q39015613
Continuing decline in service delivery for family physicians: is the malpractice crisis playing a role?Q39744430
Attitudes to reporting medication error among differing healthcare professionalsQ39865975
Adverse-event-reporting practices by US hospitals: results of a national surveyQ46931922
P433issue2
P304page(s)362-368
P577publication date2017-11-17
P1433published inJournal of Evaluation in Clinical PracticeQ15767649
P1476titleIncident reporting behaviours following the Francis report: A cross-sectional survey
P478volume24

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cites work (P2860)
Q92993439Deployment of Critical Incident Reporting System (CIRS) in public Styrian hospitals: a five year perspective
Q92060136Practical and Cultural Barriers to Reporting Incidents Among Health Workers in Indonesian Public Hospitals
Q90688554Understanding the factors influencing doctors' intentions to report patient safety concerns: a qualitative study

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