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About Ann Louise Puopolo:Ann Louise is an accomplished and highly respected safety professional and has held many prestigious positions, including Vice President of Enterprise Patient Safety and the Enterprise PSO LLC at CVS Health (until her retirement in 2020) and Vice President of Patient Safety for CRICO (Risk Management Foundation of the Harvard Medical Institutions). More recently, she has been serving as the Chair of the RLDatix Customer Advisory Board since 2022.She calls Boston, MA, home and is an active board member of many local healthcare organizations, including the Tufts Medicine Board of Directors' Committee on the Quality of Care (since June 2021), Vice-chair at Tufts Medical Center Board of Directors' Committee on the Quality of Care (since 2018), and the Board of Directors for the Alliance for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety - the trade organization to PSOs (since 2013).Ann Louise has been a long-time collaborator with RLDatix. The relationship began while she was at CRICO, supporting the Harvard Medical School-affiliated institutions with their programs to mitigate risk and improve safety. When Ann Louise moved to CVS Health, she built out their patient safety program. She brought in RL6 to support their retail pharmacy, mail, specialty, infusion, long-term care pharmacies, and MinuteClinic needs.Ann Louise received a Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree from Vanderbilt University and practiced as a critical care nurse at Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital.Things You'll Learn:The COVID-19 pandemic has accentuated the healthcare staffing crisis, but its roots go much deeper. Nurses, the backbone of the healthcare system, often take on more than necessary and are underutilized, contributing to burnout. Ann Louise underscores the potential of technology and data analytics to optimize workforce utilization and enhance patient outcomes.Ann Louise stresses the importance of integrating systems to improve efficiency, highlighting the critical role of data insights in informed decision-making for providers and healthcare organizations.Recognizing the significance of involving frontline healthcare professionals like nurses in decision-making, we can foster a culture of innovation and problem-solving within healthcare organizations by giving them a voice and acknowledging their contributions.Resources:Connect with and follow Ann Louise on LinkedIn.Follow RLDatix on LinkedIn and visit their website.Reach out to Ann at Ann.Puopolo@RLDatix.com
Pauli Cantarut al interviste Alessio Domini e ivan Crico
Ivan Crico"L'altro siel del mondo""L'altro cielo del mondo"Ronzani Editorewww.ronzanieditore.itPoesie in bisiàc e tergestino (1989 - 2022)Prefazione di Giorgio AgambenCon uno scritto di Elenio Cicchini e Nicoletta Di VitaFotografie di Roberto KusterleIn una sorta di breve autobiografia poetica, Ivan Crico ha raccontato come cominciò a scrivere in dialetto dopo la lettura delle Poesie a Casarsa di PPP. “Da quel momento, la mia vita cambiò. Quelle poesie davvero segnarono una svolta poiché, fino ad allora, in ciò che scrivevo non mi era mai sembrato di riuscire a definire le cose come le sentivo. L'italiano non era la mia lingua vera, seppure molto amata, e quindi tra le cose e i nomi che le definivano si apriva, per me, come una sorta di abisso incolmabile”. La realtà che lo circondava, con i suoi profumi e i suoi colori, l'aveva, infatti, conosciuta con altri nomi: “e questi nomi li ritrovai nelle poesie di Pasolini. C'erano difatti, in quelle liriche, molti termini che avevo sentito ed anche adoperato nell' infanzia (il bisiàc, pur essendo una parlata fondamentalmente veneta, ha in comune con il friulano numerosi vocaboli), ma soprattutto – ed è la primissima impressione, ciò che più mi meravigliò – fu come quelle parole, che per tanto tempo avevo voluto rimuovere, ritraessero alla perfezione i paesaggi da me tanto amati di queste terre di confine.(dalla prefazione di Giorgio Agamben)Ivan Crico è nato a Gorizia nel 1968, ma fin dalla nascita ha vissuto a Pieris, presso le foci del fiume Isonzo. Dal 2006 vive nell'antico borgo rurale di Tapogliano. Si dedica allo studio della pittura fin da giovanissimo, laureandosi all'Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia ed esponendo presso importanti gallerie e sedi museali. Parallelamente all'attività artistica, dai primi anni '90 ha iniziato a collaborare con gli amici poeti Amedeo Giacomini, Gian Mario Villalta, Mario Benedetti e Pierluigi Cappello (con quest'ultimo ha ideato la collana di poesia la Barca di Babele). Scrive in lingua e nell'arcaico idioma veneto bisiàc. Oltre ai libri di poesia citati nelle “Note e riferimenti bibliografici”, si segnala la raffinata versione integrale in bisiàc de Al cant dei Canti (Il Cantico dei Cantici), con prefazione del linguista Michele Cortellazzo (ACB, 2018); su invito di Giorgio Agamben, la traduzione poetica dell'opera di Pier Paolo Pasolini I Turcs tal Friùl (Quodlibet, 2019). Sempre per la collana Ardilut nel 2021 ha curato e tradotto la riedizione del El critoleo del corpo fracassao di Biagio Marin e L'arte di andar per uccelli col vischio, seguito da Presumût unviâr di Amedeo Giacomini. Con l'antropologo Gian Carlo Gri ed altri studiosi, ha inoltre studiato il fenomeno dei benandanti nel Friuli goriziano nel volume Di prodigi segreti (Istituto Gasparini, 2006). Assieme a Luca Bresciani, Paolo Gera, Mario Marchisio, Paolo Pera ha curato l'antologia poetica Fissando in volto il gelo (Terra d'ulivi, 2023). Della sua poesia – pubblicata sulle maggiori riviste italiane e all'estero – si sono occupati, tra gli altri, Giorgio Agamben, Antonella Anedda, Mario Benedetti, Franco Brevini, Manuel Cohen, Milo De Angelis, Gianni D'Elia, Hans Kitzmüller, Franco Loi, Francesco Tomada, Giovanni Tesio, Gian Mario Villalta.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarewww.ilpostodelleparole.itQuesto show fa parte del network Spreaker Prime. Se sei interessato a fare pubblicità in questo podcast, contattaci su https://www.spreaker.com/show/1487855/advertisement
El empresario y responsable del Circo Zoorprendente, Eduardo Belltall ha anunciado que presentarán una denuncia por prevaricación contra el Ayuntamiento de San Sebastián de los Reyes, “con la responsabilidad patrimonial del mismo”.
Her Story - Envisioning the Leadership Possibilities in Healthcare
Meet Sandra Fenwick:Sandra Fenwick is the former CEO of the Boston Children's Hospital. She serves on the Board of Director for the Children's Hospital Association and chairs its Public Policy Committee. She serves on the Board of Directors of CRICO, Livongo Health, Harvard's Wyss Institute for Biologically-inspired Engineering, Jobs for Massachusetts, the Massachusetts Digital Health Council, and Boston Children's Hospital. Sandra received a bachelor's from Simmons College and a Master's in Public Health from the University of Texas. Key Insights:By no means is retirement the end for Sandra Fenwick. She is still a mentor, advisor, and leader in healthcare Top Leadership Lessons. Sandra highlights on two core leadership principles. First is courage and resilience. It's important for leaders to have the courage to take risks and challenge the status quo. Second is vision. Leaders need a vision for change, as well as the skills to inspire individuals and organizations to achieve it. Almost Perfect Transition. Sandra told her board that she wanted to retire three years in advance. This allowed time for her to hire and train her eventual replacement. In 2020 Sandra stayed on a little longer than initially planned, to see the hospital through COVID-19. In Retirement. Sandra continues to mentor young leaders and has reconnected with former professional colleagues. She also serves on multiple boards of directors and utilizes her past experiences to help them achieve their mission. This episode is hosted by Gary Bisbee Ph.D. He is the Founder, Chairman, and CEO of Think Medium. Relevant Links:Check out Her Story's previous interview with SandraRead “A CEO with a singular focus: Better health for children everywhere”
ONANA INTER: INTERVISTA A GIORGIO CRICOAndré Onana all'Inter, annuncio ufficiale ormai imminente. Sarà André Onana il nuovo portiere dell'Inter, in arrivo a parametro zero dopo l'addio all'Ajax. L'Inter ha fatto un colpaccio, come dice Eto'o? Ne abbiamo parlato con il giornalista Giorgio Crico che lo conosce alla perfezione.⚽️ Abbonati a questo canale per accedere ai vantaggi:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqQefqGM8yZV3CEwXBy388Q/join✅ Abbonati al club per stare in contatto con noi più privatamente e parlare insieme di Inter
CRICO assessments are conducted by the patient safety department within their own captive insurer, with no punitive component.
Incontro con Tiziana Cera Rosco, Ivan Crico, Maël Guesdon, Paolo Maccari e Giovanna Rosadini. Presentano Michelangelo Camelliti e Gian Mario Villalta Il quarto anno della Gialla Oro consacra il nuovo spazio editoriale della collaborazione tra pordenonelegge e LietoColle con cinque autori di grande rilievo nel panorama nazionale e internazionale. È la risposta alla richiesta di una partecipazione più ampia e condivisa che nasce nei luoghi dove la scrittura poetica trova una sua casa. Edizione 2019 www.pordenonelegge.it
CRICO funds work to make therapeutic hypothermia more reliable and maximize its effectiveness.
"Parliamo mercoledì. Sono le 5.20 più o meno. C'è poco da parlare. Stiamo godendo. E c'è qualcuno che ci guarda che aveva detto che "le giocavamo come se fossero finali". Stiamo godendo". Ecco, più o meno il riassunto è questo. Ma in realtà questa puntata più tendente alla serietà vede Crico, Fuigi e Luca trattare temi vari. La Supercoppa, il rigore di Insigne, Pirlo, il centrocampo, il rigore di Insigne, Insigne che sbaglia 3 rigori su 3 contro la Juve, Mandzukic, Insigne che tira fuori il rigore, e così via.
A special report: Harvard’s medical malpractice liability program, CRICO, is giving providers extra coverage without extra premiums during the crisis.
A special report: Harvard’s medical malpractice liability program, CRICO, is giving providers extra coverage without extra premiums during the crisis.
Attribution: Ivan Crico and Roberto Paci Dalò, in “Usmaradio” for the radio program “Voci” by Roberto Paci Dalò, recorded at Casa della Fornace a San Vito al Torre (Udine) 2019, cc by-sa all. Una conversazione attorno al libro di Pier Paolo Pasolini I Turcs tal Friùl / I Turchi in Friuli (Quodlibet, 2019). Prefazione di Giorgio Agamben, testo e traduzione a cura di Graziella Chiarcossi, traduzione in versi di Ivan Crico. Testo a fronte. Ardilut. Nel silenzio della cucina di Casa della Fornace a San Vito al Torre (Udine) abbiamo avuto la possibilità di parlare a lungo con Ivan Crico attorno al libro I Turcs tal Friùl / I Turchi in Friuli da poco pubblicato da Quodlibet nella nuova collana Ardilut dedicata alla poesia in dialetto e curata da Giorgio Agamben all'insegna della tesi: «una sorta di bilinguismo è consustanziale alla poesia italiana». Il libro presenta il testo originale nell’autorevole revisione critica di Graziella Chiarcossi, accompagnata dalla traduzione in versi di Ivan Crico, uno dei più sensibili poeti friulani di oggi. Si è trattato di una conversazione ampia, appassionata e a tratti davvero emozionante, dove – a partire dal libro stesso – ci siamo incamminati attraverso la storia, la geografia (dal Friuli alla Mitteleuropa tutta tornando più volte a Gorizia e Trieste), i conflitti, le lingue e i popoli. La scheda del libro: https://www.quodlibet.it/libro/9788822902719 Nel 1944, nel Friuli percorso dalle truppe naziste e devastato dai bombardamenti anglo-americani, il giovane Pier Paolo Pasolini scrive in friulano un dramma, a metà fra la tragedia e la sacra rappresentazione, che contiene, in una drastica e quasi profetica abbreviazione, tutti i temi della sua opera futura. Soggetto del dramma è l’invasione dei Turchi in Friuli del 1499, testimoniata da una lapide che il giovane poeta poteva leggere nella chiesa di Casarsa; ma, sotto l’apparenza di un’evocazione storica, è tutto il mondo di Pasolini che I Turchi in Friuli mette in scena in un inestricabile ordito di elementi personali (i protagonisti portano lo stesso nome della madre Susanna Colussi) e motivi ideali: l’appassionata fede religiosa e la rivolta contro la Chiesa, l’amore per la vita e la fascinazione per la morte (l’uccisione di Meni Colùs alla fine del dramma sembra annunciare quella del fratello Guido solo un anno dopo), l’impegno nell’azione e la fuga nella preghiera. E non è certo un caso se tutti questi motivi, almeno in apparenza contraddittori, si compongono in una parola che è la stessa che il poeta molti anni dopo avrebbe proposto come titolo per la raccolta delle sue poesie complete: bestemmia.
Crico, Dez and Ryan: We did it! We #FoundEmily!
Hablamos acerca del príncipe de la canción, Jose Jose. El copyright estricto de Cri Cri, la posible legalización del cuatro veinte y libros vaqueros que nunca fueron leídos.
Hablamos acerca del príncipe de la canción, Jose Jose. El copyright estricto de Cri Cri, la posible legalización del cuatro veinte y libros vaqueros que nunca fueron leídos.
Betfair’s Kieran O Connor is joined by cricket guru and star of Crico-n-omics Ed Hawkins and Wisden Cricket Monthly’s Phil Walker to preview Sunday’s Cricket World Cup final between England and New Zealand. Read the latest from our team of cricket writers at https://betting.betfair.com/cricket 18+ Please Gamble Responsibly. Visit www.betfair.com
When a med mal claim emerges from patient injury, we may debate who’s liable but we can agree something undesirable happened. Mark Reynolds leads CRICO, the Risk Management Foundation of the Harvard Medical Institutions, a captive insurance program. CRICO, in addition to serving its members’ medical professional liability insurance and other needs, also provides a comparative database with 30% of U.S. MPL claims. Reynolds shares insights from this 30+ year dataset of clinical and financial data which CRICO uses to identify & propagate root cause interventions. What insights do medical malpractice claims offer to improve the Mission & Margin of healthcare? These data are one of the richest insights into U.S. healthcare quality & safety.
I’ve always been fascinated with hospital QI work. And I’ve been looking for a guest who can describe in detail how to pursue such a career. I heard today’s guest discuss his journey at a conference last year, and I thought he’d be able to explain the how and why of such a career to us. So, I'm very pleased to present my recent conversation with David Lucier. David is Director of Quality and Safety for Hospital Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital. He’s also Associate Medical Director for Specialty Programs and Clinical Collaboration at Partners Healthcare in Boston. He received his MD and MBA from Tufts University School of Medicine, and a Master's in Public Health from the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health. He completed his internal medicine residency at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, and then completed the Harvard Medical School Fellowship in Patient Safety and Quality, sponsored by CRICO, the Harvard malpractice insurer. He continues to practice medicine as an academic Hospitalist at MGH. He is truly an expert in applying QI processes in the hospital environment. In this interview, David explains why he likes QI work so much. He also sorts through the educational options for pursuing such a career if you’ve already been in practice for a while. David gave us a lot to think about. If you’re interested in pursuing this kind of career, he suggests two major steps to take: Volunteer to help out on quality and safety projects at your hospital; Decide which learning opportunities make sense for you, including individual courses, certifications, a fellowship or an advanced degree. You can find links to the resources David mentioned in today’s interview, and a transcript of the interview, by going to the show notes at vitalpe.net/episode083. Next week I’ll have a wide-ranging interview with a successful online marketing expert, course creator and professional speaker who still practices anesthesia part time. And I'll provide a qucik review of the first Physicians Helping Physicians Networking Conference.
Internationally renowned prostate expert Marc Garnick, MD, with clinical insights behind a leading cause of malpractice claims.
How getting involved in measuring error, analyzing the data, and helping develop interventions to prevent patient harm, transformed this physician.
A play by play video of a scalpel finger bougie cric. As much as I'd like to take credit, original video was filmed by Reuben Strayer with patients consent. Simply mind blowing how much cognitive work goes into a surgical airway and the video is just an amazing example. Another good example can be found here by Dr Rhee which shows a more traditional surgical approach although a prefer the scalpel finger bougie similar to Scott Wiengart, although I've had favourable experiences with the lifestat recently (seperate episode) . Other References: The formulation and introduction of a 'can't intubate, can't ventilate' algorithm into clinical practice. Emergency surgical cricothyroidotomy: 24 successful cases leading to a simple ‘scalpel–finger–tube' method
CRICO’s grant-funded research advances patient safety across disciplines and care settings.
Nearly 3 in 10 medical malpractice cases have identifiable problems with communication, according to a report by CRICO, the malpractice insurer for the Harvard medical institutions. Proven solutions highlighted a national gathering of patient safety leaders in Boston.
Preparation for the deposition and trial testimony can be paramount to a successful defense.
Boston Children’s Hospital shares journey to improve safety in the outpatient setting.
CRICO money funds new ideas to reduce medical error in 2015.
The clear conclusion of CRICO’s new analysis of national malpractice data is that diagnostic errors should be among the highest priorities for intervention.
The clear conclusion of CRICO’s new analysis of national malpractice data is that diagnostic errors should be among the highest priorities for intervention.
Harvard’s fight against medical error includes millions of dollars in 2014 for a dozen research and intervention projects.
Anesthesia safety pioneer Jeffrey Cooper speaks to Harvard’s malpractice insurer about its own successes in patient safety over three decades, and how the link between CRICO and its hospital owners should be a model around the world.
Even though the patient identified a lump on her breast, it took more than a year to diagnose cancer. Family history-taking and proper imaging were lacking. CRICO interviews one of the authors of a Harvard breast care management algorithm, Michelle Specht, MD, to consider how following such a guideline could have helped the gynecologist and radiologist--and ultimately the patient.
Harvard fellows get intensive patient safety and quality training with CRICO.
Whether it was from humble beginnings or high expectations or both, six Harvard physicians share how they decided to enter the healing profession. Their individual journeys are as unique as they are, and the path was not always straight.
Fragmented primary care in a large group practice that only treated the patient's acute problems before his death, missed several opportunities at better control of cardiac risk factors.
Missing chemotherapy orders drop from 30 percent when patients arrive for treatment, down to two percent. This means patients aren’t delayed and doctors aren’t scrambling.
A top surgeon mistakenly performed carpal tunnel instead of trigger release procedure after multiple interruptions and personnel shift changes in OR.
Nation's "first malpractice crisis" resulted in 1821, after a horse fell on a man and the surgeon waited a month to visit his patient to see if his attempted hip reduction worked.
Lack of collaboration and poor documentation among the factors in large settlement with severely compromised infant.
Harvard Hosts Conference for Nurses to Improve Patient Safety
Harvard Hosts Conference for Nurses to Improve Patient Safety
The surgeon orchestrated a great recovery from a massive bleed that resulted in blindness, but the patient sued for answers.
An online Medscape poll reveals which specialty has the most and least happy members, and CRICO interviews physicians to find out how they reduce stress and stay motivated.
The patient was under 50 and lack of communication between the PCP and GI about a sigmoidoscopy order contributed to a diagnostic failure.
Armed with its own malpractice data, a large group practice builds on an existing electronic record system to ensure that when its doctors order a referral, the referral actually takes place. (Audio file updated 03/22/2012)
(Part 2 of 2) The “Father of Patient Safety” reflects on the impact of the patient safety movement a decade after the IOM report….its successes…and its disappointments, from a national vantage point.
A consent discussion with patients leads the PSA testing advice in a Harvard-generated tool to help primary care MDs manage prostate care.
Program 3, 2010 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
A physician and a lawyer discuss hazards of increasing the use of telephone advice from specialists.
Program 2, 2010 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
Even if negligence didn’t cause a patient’s death, it may be compensable if it lessened the chance of survival.
Communication and documentation flaws compromised a case that featured allegations of poor assessment and monitoring both pre-op and post-op.
As more and more health care is provided in the ambulatory setting, the data from malpractice carriers show that more and more lawsuits get their start in the same setting.
Program 1, 2010 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
Program 3, 2009 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
How are physician responsible when patients don't keep appointments or test results don't come back? Guest commentator John Cassidy, JD of Ficksman and Conley, Boston, MA.
Systems could have helped one doctor to consider colon cancer screening, and another doctor to follow up on a referral.
Care required better resident supervision, closer follow-up on ordered test.
Program 2, 2009 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
Program 1, 2009 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
Fetal monitor strips, family history forms, and other non-medical record documents need to be preserved.
Despite several evaluations in the ED and PCP office, the cause of pulmonary symptoms eluded providers, led to unnecessary surgery, fear of cancer--and a mid-range settlement.
Program 4, 2008 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
New research underscores the need, effectiveness of formalizing sign-out and discharge summary processes.
Program 3, 2008 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
Program 2, 2008 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
Even though the cause of a brain hemorrhage was difficult to prove, the case was settled because management of the second twin's delivery was so difficult to defend.
Part 3 of an address by best-selling author and Harvard Professor of Medicine Jerome Groopman to a patient safety symposium in Cambridge about the cognitive processes that lead physicians to make an incorrect diagnosis. Part 1 reviewed the ways physicians seek and process information on their way to making correct and incorrect diagnoses. Part 2 involved how how thinking errors occur. Part 3 looks at how to apply this knowledge to improving diagnoses in medical practice.
Program 1, 2008 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
November 2007 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
Best-selling author and Harvard Professor of Medicine Jerome Groopman speaks to a patient safety symposium in Cambridge about the cognitive processes that lead physicians to make an incorrect diagnosis. Part 1 reviewed the ways physicians seek and process information on their way to making correct and incorrect diagnoses. Part 3 will look at how to apply this knowledge to improving diagnoses in medical practice.
September 2007 Issue of Resource, a bimonthly audio news, information, and education program about patient safety and healthcare risk management from CRICO in the Harvard medical system.
The goal was to treat uncontrolled pain from tumors but the patient was left with unexpected hearing loss. The patient sued when she claimed the surgeon changed the side of the operation without consulting her. For ideas that might help prevent these negative outcomes, we talk with Douglas Smink, MD, MPH, an associate medical director for CRICO and the Chief of Surgery at Brigham and Women's Faulkner Hospital.