ABSTRACT

Despite its frequency and its potential severity, preventable medical harm is still prominent in American hospitals and continues to put an alarming amount of lives at risk, being the third leading cause of death in the United States. Even some of the most commonly performed surgeries, such as knee and hip replacements, are resulting in a rapidly increasing rate of surgical site infections.

Patricia Morrill’s book is specifically written for the healthcare industry. It fills the need for exposing how preventable harm is a systemwide problem and provides a step-by-step model to apply for raising process improvement to a strategic level. The approach is ideal for team training purposes. The Perils of Un-Coordinated Healthcare gives the reader both a personal and professional view of the impact of preventable medical harm, using case studies and observations on preventable deaths and healthcare practice alongside recommended research topics and resources. By looking at the work of both healthcare workers and their managing executives, this instructional text gives methods to assess workforces and self-assess the performances of managers. The book equips readers with a 360 view: patients, families, physicians, workforce, leaders and culture.

Morrill’s ten-step model of Process Improvement Strategy Deployment integrates Lean and Project Management methodologies for developing a problem-solving culture and initiating process improvement at a strategic level. It is essential reading for those in the healthcare industry.

part I|40 pages

The perils of un-coordinated healthcare

chapter 1|17 pages

A case study: the impact of preventable harm

What happened to my mother?

chapter 2|10 pages

Discussion topics

What was the impact?

chapter 3|11 pages

Human factors: the impact of the workplace

What is the truth about un-coordinated care?

part II|42 pages

A strategic approach toward eliminating preventable harm

chapter 4|6 pages

Leading change

chapter 5|19 pages

A guide to Process Improvement Strategy Deployment

What can you do?

chapter 6|15 pages

Instruction on leading improvement