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      Improving patient safety by instructional systems design.

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      Quality & safety in health care
      BMJ

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          Abstract

          Education and training are important elements in patient safety, both as a potential contributing factor to risks and hazards of healthcare associated injury or harm and as an intervention to be used in eliminating or preventing such harm. All too often we have relied on training as the only interventions for patient safety without examining other alternatives or realizing that, in some cases, the training systems themselves are part of the problem. One way to ensure safety by design is to apply established design principles to education and training. Instructional systems design (ISD) is a systematic method of development of education and training programs for improved learner performance. The ISD process involves five integrated steps: analysis, development, design, implementation, and evaluation (ADDIE). The application of ISD using the ADDIE approach can eliminate or prevent education and training from being a contributing factor of health associated injury or harm, and can also be effective in preventing injury or harm.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Qual Saf Health Care
          Quality & safety in health care
          BMJ
          1475-3901
          1475-3898
          Dec 2006
          : 15 Suppl 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), Center for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety, 540 Gather Road, Rockville, MD 20850, USA. jabattles@ahrq.gov
          Article
          15/suppl_1/i25
          10.1136/qshc.2005.015917
          2464865
          17142604
          a84c9932-50d0-4d01-aad0-d5429d41a7c6
          History

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