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https://www.tmlt.org/
Texas Medical liability Trust(TMLT) is a unique not-for-profit
health care liability claim trust owned by its Texas physician
policyholders. No matter what your specialty, practice type or location,
Texas Medical liability Trust can offer you the medical liability coverage
you need to protect your practice and your professional reputation. We
have a 25-year track record of providing strong, stable medical liability
coverage at responsible prices. Our products are backed by exceptional
customer service and the value-added benefits your receive at TMLT are
second to none.
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Making health care safer: a critical analysis of patient safety
practices.
Evid Rep Technol Assess (Summ). 2001;(43):i-x,
1-668. Review.
-
Preventing medical errors: communicating a role for Medicare
beneficiaries.
Health Care Financing Review; September 22,
2001; Swift, Elaine, K. Koepke, Christopher, P. Ferrer, Jorge, A.
Miranda, David
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Patient Safety: Achieving a New Standard for Care
(2004)
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Crossing the Quality Chasm:
A New Health System for the 21st Century (2001)
-
Setting priorities for patient
safety
W B Runciman, M J Edmonds, and M Pradhan Qual Saf Health
Care 2002; 11: 224-229.
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Two Words to Improve Physician-Patient Communication: What Else?
Patricia A. Barrier, James T.-c. Li, Norman M.
Jensen
Release date: 2/1/2003
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Vincent C, Taylor-Adams S, Stanhope N. Framework for analyzing
risk and safety in clinical medicine.
BMJ. 1998 Apr
11;316(7138):1154-7. Review.
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Developing a Culture of Safety in the Veterans Health Administration
Medical Malpractice Something to Worry About?
±âŸ
- Problem Doctors: Is There a System-Level Solution? -
http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/abstract/144/2/107
- Physician performance failures are not rare and pose
substantial threats to patient welfare and safety. Few hospitals
respond to such failures promptly or effectively. Failure to
ensure the quality and safety of the performance of colleagues
is a breach of medicine's fiduciary responsibility to the
public. A major reason for this deficiency is the hospitals'
lack of formal systems to monitor physician performance and to
identify and correct shortcomings. To develop and implement
these systems, hospitals need better performance measures and
substantial expansion of external programs for assessment and
remediation. This is a task well beyond the capacities of
individual hospitals; a national effort is required. The authors
call on the Federation of State Medical Boards, the American
Board of Medical Specialties, and the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (organizations that
already bear a fiduciary responsibility for ensuring safe,
competent care) to collaborate on developing better methods for
measuring performance and to expand programs for helping
practitioners who are deficient.
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