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July 14,
2006 |
Safety
first: Using patient identifiers
An important component of patient safety is to identify
patients accurately and match the patient's identity with the correct
treatment or service. The fast-paced nature of medical care can sometimes
cause challenging situations for clinicians to correctly identify patients
when providing care. This is why the Joint Commission on Accreditation
of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) has made patient identification the
first of its National Patient Safety Goals.
The
MGH has implemented policies to help clinicians with the patient identification
process in both inpatient and outpatient settings. Two patient identifiers
must be used before any treatment or service is provided to the patient
to ensure the appropriate care is given. The same two identifiers must
be verified in two locations before treatment begins. For example, if
a nurse is giving a patient medication, he or she would match the name
and medical record number on the patient's wristband to the name and medical
record number on the medication administration record.
For inpatient units, the two identifiers must be the patient's name and
medical record number. In outpatient areas, the identifiers should be
two of the following: patient's name, medical record number, social security
number, date of birth or facial recognition. Outpatient staff should make
sure that the two identifiers they use are consistent with what their
practice is using and should have a third identifier as back-up.
For more information about patient identifiers or the upcoming JCAHO survey,
visit the hospital's JCAHO website at www2.massgeneral.org/jcaho.
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