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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page research paper that examines risk management in regards to hospital obstetrics. In the litigious environment that is typical of American society today, risk managers serve as a support to health care professionals by managing potential and actual liability situations (Rubeor, 2003). They analyze the facts surrounding a possible untoward event and help clinicians communicate necessary information to patients and their families, while documenting this in an objective manner (Rubeor, 2003). This discussion of risk management examines this topic in reference to risk management and obstetrics. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khobrisk.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
They analyze the facts surrounding a possible untoward event and help clinicians communicate necessary information to patients and their families, while documenting this in an objective manner (Rubeor, 2003).
The following discussion of risk management examines this topic in reference to risk management and obstetrics. Across the country, obstetricians have the highest frequency of malpractice suits (Rubeor, 2003).
In order to manage risk involved with obstetrics, nurses should report any "therapeutic or diagnostic complications or delay, any unexpected outcome or any untoward event" that has the possibility of
negatively affecting the patient (Rubeor, 2003, p. 94). An untoward event is defined as "one that is inconsistent with, or not reasonably expected as, a consequence of treatment and causes
injury to a patient" (Rubeor, 2003, p. 94). For example, in a situation where there is a failure to find a non-reassuring fetal heart pattern and the infant experiences
a poor outcome, hospital risk management should be notified immediately (Rubeor, 2003). The risk manager would assure that the medical records and fetal strips were sequestered so that they would
not be lost and the event would be reviewed in a confidential manner in anticipation of litigation (Rubeor, 2003). An expert review would determine if there had been any breach
in the standard of care. But also risk management serves to prevent such incidents and promote patient safety. Risk managers analyze a sequence of events in order to determine ways
in which patient care can be made safer and simpler (Rubeor, 2003). Again, taking the example of electronic fetal monitoring (EFM), this technology has the potential to promote fetal
health and improve neonatal status, but only when it is used in accordance with published standards and guidelines (Simpson and Knox, 2000). In other words, the technology by itself is
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