Open Disclosure and Second Victim

123456789101112
Across
  1. 3. Nurses, junior doctors, and even custodians at the scene of Elaine Bromiley's resuscitation attempt were key participants. The nurse explained multiple times and even suggested to bring an airway kit, but consultants simply ignored or she wasn't heard. This was a failure in which of 4 Martins Teamwork Lessons.
  2. 4. In Edna's case, medical error was characterized by ______.
  3. 6. A reconstructive plastic surgeon amputates the wrong hand eventhough the patient surgery went uneventful. This type of medical error was characterized by ______.
  4. 8. Type of cost can be litigious, or even associated with having to care for patients who become more ill because of medical mistake.
  5. 11. People work indepdnently to achieve their own individual goals during a surgery. It is improtant for this individual to coordinate the goals to ensure any benefit.
  6. 12. To ensure that mistake not only doesn't recur, but also to look at the medical error with a compassionate eye, and understand the cause of the mistake is vital.
Down
  1. 1. Martin's Teamwork Lessons stemming from systematic breakdown of teamwork during Elaine Bromiley's resuscitation attempt failed to vocalized what was the problem at hand. which four principle lesssons was this?
  2. 2. Person who has the wisdom and knowledge (accuracy) to ensure that it goes right doesn't do it.
  3. 5. People who are part of the care and treatment incident where an error occurs. It can be the resident, doctor, medical student, allied health professionals surroudning an medical error.
  4. 7. Internal wisdom where you learn to apply your knowledge about medicine and recognize error.
  5. 9. Just as a pilot checks off manually before even starting the engine, Martin's teamwork lessons pushed forth for ______ when complications arise, even when it is a low-risk surgical intervention.
  6. 10. This is a government-based program that is looking at how we engage, talk, and discuss with culturally different patients who present to hospital. We don't frame them as patients but a formal engagement.