Florida Dental Hygienist Ebook Continuing Education

35. A culture of safety is best described as an environment in which: a. Individuals can report errors, close calls, or near misses without fear of retribution. b. Monitoring and reporting systems are used to

41. Infants and children are at high risk for medication errors because? a. They cannot read the directions. b. There is a larger therapeutic index with this population. c. Medication doses are weight-based and require calculations. d. They metabolize drugs in a manner similar to adults. 42. The most effective way that patients can help prevent medical/dental errors is by: a. Using only those healthcare providers they know personally. b. Being actively involved in their own health care. c. Having complete trust in their healthcare providers. d. Writing to their government representatives. 43. A major international effort launched by the World Health Organization to address patient safety around the world is known as the: a. Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research. b. Institute for Safe Medication Practices. c. Leapfrog Group. d. High 5s Project. 44. In 2001, the Leapfrog Group recommended three safe practices, which included: a. Computerized prescriber order entry. b. Promoting leadership in safety training. c. Designating a patient safety professional. d. Having a system that punishes negligent caregivers. 45. Performance standards protect patient safety by assuring a level of:

establish accountability and assign blame. c. Individuals report errors anonymously. d. Errors are tracked automatically.

36. Lucian Leape and his associates maintain that whereas errors define the boundaries of safe practice, the cultural focus must be on preventing: a. The patient from knowing the error has occurred. b. The clinician from experiencing punishment. c. The proliferation of lawsuits. d. The allocation of blame. 37. A root cause analysis is typically performed: c. To identify who is at fault. d. To identify active errors. 38. The 2013 study by Mettes, Bruers, van der Sanden, and Wensing analyzed 1000 records and found that: a. 18 adverse events had occurred. b. Four wrong tooth extractions had occurred. c. Three cases of remaining roots following tooth extractions had occurred. d. Five cases of crowns being swallowed by patients had occurred. 39. The 2015 study by Obadan, Ramoni, and Kalenderian a. Before an error occurs. b. After an error occurs. reported that the largest type of harm reported was: a. Delayed and unnecessary treatment/disease progression after misdiagnosis. b. Extraction of the incorrect teeth. c. Errors involving the prescribing of narcotic medications. d. Leakage of sodium hypochlorite into the apical tissue during endodontic treatment. 40. Patient populations at high risk for medical/dental errors in the United States include infants and children, older adults, and patients:

a. Competency. b. Accountability. c. Blame. d. Responsibility.

46. All of the following were noted in Table 5 as one of the seven steps to improve patient safety in dentistry EXCEPT: a. Promotion of a culture of patient safety in dental care. b. Establishing lines of information on adverse events. c. Establishing measures to prevent healthcare risks by elimination or reduction. d. Ongoing training of patients on patient safety measures.

a. Who are premenopausal females. b. With impaired respiratory function. c. With limited language skills or limited literacy. d. In the emergency department of a hospital.

Course Code: DFL04PS

Page 36

Book Code: DHFL2624

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