Five ways to get a grip on patient safety in UGME curriculum: exploring the current landscape and future positioning

Efforts to increase patient safety have increased over the past 20 years. Education in patient safety has historically targeted residents, senior physicians, and healthcare professionals. Recently, patient safety has been identified as a top priority that should be instilled in the earliest stages...

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Main Authors: Ekta Khemani, Sanjum Hunjan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Canadian Medical Education Journal 2025-06-01
Series:Canadian Medical Education Journal
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/cmej/article/view/79864
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author Ekta Khemani
Sanjum Hunjan
author_facet Ekta Khemani
Sanjum Hunjan
author_sort Ekta Khemani
collection DOAJ
description Efforts to increase patient safety have increased over the past 20 years. Education in patient safety has historically targeted residents, senior physicians, and healthcare professionals. Recently, patient safety has been identified as a top priority that should be instilled in the earliest stages of medical education, targeted at medical students. This Black Ice paper is intended to help readers to get a grip on how to manage barriers associated with reporting of medical errors, analysis of patient safety incidents, and integration of patient safety education curricula into existing courses and rotations.
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publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Canadian Medical Education Journal
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spelling doaj-art-c54015abc23b439ca81f302eebe12a082025-08-20T02:21:49ZengCanadian Medical Education JournalCanadian Medical Education Journal1923-12022025-06-0110.36834/cmej.79864Five ways to get a grip on patient safety in UGME curriculum: exploring the current landscape and future positioning Ekta Khemani0Sanjum Hunjan1McMaster UniversityMcMaster University Efforts to increase patient safety have increased over the past 20 years. Education in patient safety has historically targeted residents, senior physicians, and healthcare professionals. Recently, patient safety has been identified as a top priority that should be instilled in the earliest stages of medical education, targeted at medical students. This Black Ice paper is intended to help readers to get a grip on how to manage barriers associated with reporting of medical errors, analysis of patient safety incidents, and integration of patient safety education curricula into existing courses and rotations. https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/cmej/article/view/79864
spellingShingle Ekta Khemani
Sanjum Hunjan
Five ways to get a grip on patient safety in UGME curriculum: exploring the current landscape and future positioning
Canadian Medical Education Journal
title Five ways to get a grip on patient safety in UGME curriculum: exploring the current landscape and future positioning
title_full Five ways to get a grip on patient safety in UGME curriculum: exploring the current landscape and future positioning
title_fullStr Five ways to get a grip on patient safety in UGME curriculum: exploring the current landscape and future positioning
title_full_unstemmed Five ways to get a grip on patient safety in UGME curriculum: exploring the current landscape and future positioning
title_short Five ways to get a grip on patient safety in UGME curriculum: exploring the current landscape and future positioning
title_sort five ways to get a grip on patient safety in ugme curriculum exploring the current landscape and future positioning
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/cmej/article/view/79864
work_keys_str_mv AT ektakhemani fivewaystogetagriponpatientsafetyinugmecurriculumexploringthecurrentlandscapeandfuturepositioning
AT sanjumhunjan fivewaystogetagriponpatientsafetyinugmecurriculumexploringthecurrentlandscapeandfuturepositioning