O'Meara stresses that a system known as a Decision Support System of DSS can be integrated into existing it to identify potential errors that could be made on any given case and provide the staff with flags to help them avoid such errors. (December 2007, pp. 970-979) DSS technology can seriously improve the chances that patients will not receive inadequate care or that services and potential challenges to them get noted and flagged appropriately to alert nurses to ways in which common mistakes can be made. DSS systems could alert the nurse of patient allergies, noted mechanical checks, crosschecking medication administration and any number of things that support patient safety.
Conversely Giordano, stresses that patient safety, in spite of it and other technology now utilized for patient care is essentially the nurses responsibility, therefore it is absolutely essential that the nurse advocates for safety and does not rely so much upon technology that she or he reduces the needed physical checks and balances associated with patient safety. Giordano states:
Perioperative nurses must be diligent guardians of surgical patients' safety at all times because potential hazards exist not only with new technology (eg, interactive, image-guided, stereotactic neurosurgery systems) but also with familiar, standard equipment (eg, electrosurgical and laparoscopic units)....New technology is beneficial when it eliminates time-consuming manual tasks, reduces surgical time, and facilitates less-invasive surgical procedures. Misapplication or misuse of this technology, however, can result in needless patient injuries. Patient advocacy and control of the surgical environment are the responsibilities of perioperative nurses. (February 1995, p. 314)
Giordano's...
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