14 results on '"Reckmann, M."'
Search Results
2. Isolated and combined deficiencies of NADH dehydrogenase (complex I) in muscle tissue of children with mitochondrial myopathies
- Author
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Korenke, G. -C., Bentlage, H. A. C. M., Ruitenbeek, W., Sengers, R. C. A., Sperl, W., Trijbels, J. M. F., Gabreels, F. J. M., Wijburg, F. A., Wiedermann, V., Hanefeld, F., Wendel, U., Reckmann, M., Griebel, V., and Wölk, H.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Regionale Netzwerke zur Förderung der nachhaltigen Entwicklung
- Author
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Reckmann, M.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Trachealagenesie
- Author
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Bürrig Kf, Dost P, Roth H, Majewski F, and Reckmann M
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Tracheal agenesis ,business.industry ,Fistula ,Respiratory disease ,Foregut ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,VACTERL association ,Surgery ,Anal atresia ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Agenesis ,Medicine ,business ,Cerebellar hypoplasia - Abstract
A case of tracheal agenesis, a rare foregut malformation, is described. This malformation is combined with a tracheo-oesophageal fistula, furthermore with rectal and anal atresia, cardiac malformations, dysplastic kidneys, wedge-shaped vertebrae, and cerebellar hypoplasia. Since a tracheo-oesophageal fistula is a possible component of the VACTERL Association [(V) vertebral defects, (A) anal atresia, (C) cardial malformations, (T) tracheo-(E)-oesophageal fistula, (R) renal or (L) limb malformations], similar cases are reviewed from the literature and their relationship to this association is discussed.
- Published
- 1991
5. Does Computerized Provider Order Entry Reduce Prescribing Errors for Hospital Inpatients? A Systematic Review
- Author
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Reckmann, M. H., primary, Westbrook, J. I., additional, Koh, Y., additional, Lo, C., additional, and Day, R. O., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Trachealagenesie
- Author
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Dost, Ph., primary, Majewski, F., additional, Roth, H., additional, Reckmann, M., additional, and Bürrig, K.-F., additional
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- 1991
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- View/download PDF
7. Zwei unspezifische Z�kalulzera bei einem sechsj�hrigen Kind als Ursache intestinaler Blutungen.
- Author
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Varney, M., Schmidt, P., and Reckmann, M.
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- 1987
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- View/download PDF
8. TOPICAL BIOAVAILABILITY OF METHYL SALICYLATE
- Author
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ROBERTS, M. S., primary, FAVRETTO, W. A., additional, MEYER, A., additional, RECKMANN, M., additional, and WONGSEELASHOTE, T., additional
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- 1982
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- View/download PDF
9. Zwei unspezifische Zökalulzera bei einem sechsjährigen Kind als Ursache intestinaler Blutungen
- Author
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Varney, M., primary, Schmidt, P., additional, and Reckmann, M., additional
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- 1987
- Full Text
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10. Zwei unspezifische Zökalulzera bei einem sechsjährigen Kind als Ursache intestinaler Blutungen
- Author
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Varney, M., Schmidt, P., and Reckmann, M.
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- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Effects of two commercial electronic prescribing systems on prescribing error rates in hospital in-patients: a before and after study
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Richard O. Day, William B. Runciman, Johanna I. Westbrook, Melissa T. Baysari, Margaret H. Reckmann, Jeffrey Braithwaite, Ling Li, Connie Lo, Rosemary Burke, Westbrook, Johanna I, Reckmann, M, Runciman, William Ben, Burke, Rosemary, Lo, C, Baysari, MT, Braithwaite, J, and Day, R.O
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Non-Clinical Medicine ,MEDLINE ,lcsh:Medicine ,Pharmacists ,Drug Prescriptions ,03 medical and health sciences ,Electronic Prescribing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Electronic prescribing ,Medicine ,Medication Errors ,In patient ,controlled study ,030212 general & internal medicine ,human ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Inpatients ,electronic prescribing ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,clinical effectiveness ,lcsh:R ,article ,Australia ,commercial phenomena ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,major clinical study ,3. Good health ,hospital patient ,Prescribing error ,Before and after study ,Medical emergency ,sense organs ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
In a before-and-after study, Johanna Westbrook and colleagues evaluate the change in prescribing error rates after the introduction of two commercial electronic prescribing systems in two Australian hospitals., Background Considerable investments are being made in commercial electronic prescribing systems (e-prescribing) in many countries. Few studies have measured or evaluated their effectiveness at reducing prescribing error rates, and interactions between system design and errors are not well understood, despite increasing concerns regarding new errors associated with system use. This study evaluated the effectiveness of two commercial e-prescribing systems in reducing prescribing error rates and their propensities for introducing new types of error. Methods and Results We conducted a before and after study involving medication chart audit of 3,291 admissions (1,923 at baseline and 1,368 post e-prescribing system) at two Australian teaching hospitals. In Hospital A, the Cerner Millennium e-prescribing system was implemented on one ward, and three wards, which did not receive the e-prescribing system, acted as controls. In Hospital B, the iSoft MedChart system was implemented on two wards and we compared before and after error rates. Procedural (e.g., unclear and incomplete prescribing orders) and clinical (e.g., wrong dose, wrong drug) errors were identified. Prescribing error rates per admission and per 100 patient days; rates of serious errors (5-point severity scale, those ≥3 were categorised as serious) by hospital and study period; and rates and categories of postintervention “system-related” errors (where system functionality or design contributed to the error) were calculated. Use of an e-prescribing system was associated with a statistically significant reduction in error rates in all three intervention wards (respectively reductions of 66.1% [95% CI 53.9%–78.3%]; 57.5% [33.8%–81.2%]; and 60.5% [48.5%–72.4%]). The use of the system resulted in a decline in errors at Hospital A from 6.25 per admission (95% CI 5.23–7.28) to 2.12 (95% CI 1.71–2.54; p, Editors' Summary Background Medication errors—for example, prescribing the wrong drug or giving a drug by the wrong route—frequently occur in health care settings and are responsible for thousands of deaths every year. Until recently, medicines were prescribed and dispensed using systems based on hand-written scripts. In hospitals, for example, physicians wrote orders for medications directly onto a medication chart, which was then used by the nursing staff to give drugs to their patients. However, drugs are now increasingly being prescribed using electronic prescribing (e-prescribing) systems. With these systems, prescribers use a computer and order medications for their patients with the help of a drug information database and menu items, free text boxes, and prewritten orders for specific conditions (so-called passive decision support). The system reviews the patient's medication and known allergy list and alerts the physician to any potential problems, including drug interactions (active decision support). Then after the physician has responded to these alerts, the order is transmitted electronically to the pharmacy and/or the nursing staff who administer the prescription. Why Was This Study Done? By avoiding the need for physicians to write out prescriptions and by providing active and passive decision support, e-prescribing has the potential to reduce medication errors. But, even though many countries are investing in expensive commercial e-prescribing systems, few studies have evaluated the effects of these systems on prescribing error rates. Moreover, little is known about the interactions between system design and errors despite fears that e-prescribing might introduce new errors. In this study, the researchers analyze prescribing error rates in hospital in-patients before and after the implementation of two commercial e-prescribing systems. What Did the Researchers Do and Find? The researchers examined medication charts for procedural errors (unclear, incomplete, or illegal orders) and for clinical errors (for example, wrong drug or dose) at two Australian hospitals before and after the introduction of commercial e-prescribing systems. At Hospital A, the Cerner Millennium e-prescribing system was introduced on one ward; three other wards acted as controls. At Hospital B, the researchers compared the error rates on two wards before and after the introduction of the iSoft MedChart e-prescribing system. The introduction of an e-prescribing system was associated with a substantial reduction in error rates in the three intervention wards; error rates on the control wards did not change significantly during the study. At Hospital A, medication errors declined from 6.25 to 2.12 per admission after the introduction of e-prescribing whereas at Hospital B, they declined from 3.62 to 1.46 per admission. This reduction in error rates was mainly driven by a reduction in procedural error rates and there was only a limited change in overall clinical error rates. Notably, however, the rate of serious errors decreased across the intervention wards from 0.25 to 0.14 per admission (a 44% reduction), whereas the serious error rate only decreased by 17% in the control wards during the study. Finally, system-related errors (for example, selection of an inappropriate drug located on a drop-down menu next to a likely drug selection) accounted for 35% of errors in the intervention wards after the implementation of e-prescribing. What Do These Findings Mean? These findings show that the implementation of these two e-prescribing systems markedly reduced hospital in-patient prescribing error rates, mainly by reducing the number of incomplete, illegal, or unclear medication orders. The limited decision support built into both the e-prescribing systems used here may explain the limited reduction in clinical error rates but, importantly, both e-prescribing systems reduced serious medication errors. Finally, the high rate of system-related errors recorded in this study is worrying but is potentially remediable by system redesign and user training. Because this was a “real-world” study, it was not possible to choose the intervention wards randomly. Moreover, there was no control ward at Hospital B, and the wards included in the study had very different specialties. These and other aspects of the study design may limit the generalizability of these findings, which need to be confirmed and extended in additional studies. Even so, these findings provide persuasive evidence of the current and potential ability of commercial e-prescribing systems to reduce prescribing errors in hospital in-patients provided these systems are continually monitored and refined to improve their performance. Additional Information Please access these Web sites via the online version of this summary at http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001164. ClinfoWiki has pages on medication errors and on electronic prescribing (note: the Clinical Informatics Wiki is a free online resource that anyone can add to or edit) Electronic prescribing in hospitals challenges and lessons learned describes the implementation of e-prescribing in UK hospitals; more information about e-prescribing in the UK is available on the NHS Connecting for Health Website The Clinicians Guide to e-Prescribing provides up-to-date information about e-prescribing in the USA Information about e-prescribing in Australia is also available Information about electronic health records in Australia
- Published
- 2012
12. Effects of two commercial electronic prescribing systems on prescribing error rates in hospital in-patients: a before and after study.
- Author
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Westbrook JI, Reckmann M, Li L, Runciman WB, Burke R, Lo C, Baysari MT, Braithwaite J, and Day RO
- Subjects
- Australia, Hospitals, Teaching, Inpatients statistics & numerical data, Medication Errors classification, Pharmacists statistics & numerical data, Drug Prescriptions statistics & numerical data, Electronic Prescribing statistics & numerical data, Medication Errors statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Considerable investments are being made in commercial electronic prescribing systems (e-prescribing) in many countries. Few studies have measured or evaluated their effectiveness at reducing prescribing error rates, and interactions between system design and errors are not well understood, despite increasing concerns regarding new errors associated with system use. This study evaluated the effectiveness of two commercial e-prescribing systems in reducing prescribing error rates and their propensities for introducing new types of error., Methods and Results: We conducted a before and after study involving medication chart audit of 3,291 admissions (1,923 at baseline and 1,368 post e-prescribing system) at two Australian teaching hospitals. In Hospital A, the Cerner Millennium e-prescribing system was implemented on one ward, and three wards, which did not receive the e-prescribing system, acted as controls. In Hospital B, the iSoft MedChart system was implemented on two wards and we compared before and after error rates. Procedural (e.g., unclear and incomplete prescribing orders) and clinical (e.g., wrong dose, wrong drug) errors were identified. Prescribing error rates per admission and per 100 patient days; rates of serious errors (5-point severity scale, those ≥3 were categorised as serious) by hospital and study period; and rates and categories of postintervention "system-related" errors (where system functionality or design contributed to the error) were calculated. Use of an e-prescribing system was associated with a statistically significant reduction in error rates in all three intervention wards (respectively reductions of 66.1% [95% CI 53.9%-78.3%]; 57.5% [33.8%-81.2%]; and 60.5% [48.5%-72.4%]). The use of the system resulted in a decline in errors at Hospital A from 6.25 per admission (95% CI 5.23-7.28) to 2.12 (95% CI 1.71-2.54; p<0.0001) and at Hospital B from 3.62 (95% CI 3.30-3.93) to 1.46 (95% CI 1.20-1.73; p<0.0001). This decrease was driven by a large reduction in unclear, illegal, and incomplete orders. The Hospital A control wards experienced no significant change (respectively -12.8% [95% CI -41.1% to 15.5%]; -11.3% [-40.1% to 17.5%]; -20.1% [-52.2% to 12.4%]). There was limited change in clinical error rates, but serious errors decreased by 44% (0.25 per admission to 0.14; p = 0.0002) across the intervention wards compared to the control wards (17% reduction; 0.30-0.25; p = 0.40). Both hospitals experienced system-related errors (0.73 and 0.51 per admission), which accounted for 35% of postsystem errors in the intervention wards; each system was associated with different types of system-related errors., Conclusions: Implementation of these commercial e-prescribing systems resulted in statistically significant reductions in prescribing error rates. Reductions in clinical errors were limited in the absence of substantial decision support, but a statistically significant decline in serious errors was observed. System-related errors require close attention as they are frequent, but are potentially remediable by system redesign and user training. Limitations included a lack of control wards at Hospital B and an inability to randomize wards to the intervention.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. [Tracheal agenesis. A case report].
- Author
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Dost P, Majewski F, Roth H, Reckmann M, and Bürrig KF
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Trachea embryology, Abnormalities, Multiple, Trachea abnormalities, Tracheoesophageal Fistula congenital
- Abstract
A case of tracheal agenesis, a rare foregut malformation, is described. This malformation is combined with a tracheo-oesophageal fistula, furthermore with rectal and anal atresia, cardiac malformations, dysplastic kidneys, wedge-shaped vertebrae, and cerebellar hypoplasia. Since a tracheo-oesophageal fistula is a possible component of the VACTERL Association [(V) vertebral defects, (A) anal atresia, (C) cardial malformations, (T) tracheo-(E)-oesophageal fistula, (R) renal or (L) limb malformations], similar cases are reviewed from the literature and their relationship to this association is discussed.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. [2 nonspecific cecal ulcers in a 6-year-old child as a cause of intestinal hemorrhage].
- Author
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Varney M, Schmidt P, and Reckmann M
- Subjects
- Cecal Diseases surgery, Cecum pathology, Child, Diagnosis, Differential, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage surgery, Humans, Male, Ulcer surgery, Cecal Diseases pathology, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage pathology, Ulcer pathology
- Abstract
This is a report on recurrent rectal bleedings in a 6-year-old boy caused by 2 non-specific ulcers of the caecum. These ulcers are extremely rare in childhood and their aetiology is unknown. In this case the causative factor was supposed to be a preliminary cortisone therapy. The diagnosis of these ulcers is quite difficult because of the absence of any specific symptoms. X-ray and endoscopy of the colon often fail to give reliable results. Usually the diagnosis can be obtained only by laparotomy and histology. In therapy hemicolectomy is suggested to prevent perforation as the most usual complication. During conservative treatment coloscopic findings have to be controlled constantly.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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