ISSN 0303-5212
 

Editorial 
RMJ. 2019; 44(3): 430-431


Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries?

Amatul Aisha Rahman.

Abstract
Healthcare organizations are complex organizations and healthcare delivery is a complex process involving number of stakeholders. Patient safety is not an easy task to achieve in healthcare settings, especially in developing countries because of resource constraints, shortage of properly qualified medical, nursing and paramedical professionals, underdeveloped information technology and lack of awareness about patient safety in all stakeholders. Adequate supplies to control and prevent infections are not readily available and the compliance with hand hygiene, blood safety or proper waste disposal is very poor. The unsafe use of injections, medical devices, blood products, inadequate surgical procedures and biomedical waste management result in thousands of unreported infections acquired from patients and healthcare professionals. WHO estimates that syringes or needles are reused without sterilization is between 1.5% and 69.4% in transitional and developing countries. In a survey conducted in 22 developing countries, the percentage of facilities not using proper waste disposal methods ranged from 18% to 64%.

Key words: Patient safety, hospitals, patients.


 
ARTICLE TOOLS
Abstract
PDF Fulltext
How to cite this articleHow to cite this article
Citation Tools
Related Records
 Articles by Amatul Aisha Rahman
on Google
on Google Scholar

How to Cite this Article
Pubmed Style

Amatul Aisha Rahman. Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries? . RMJ. 2019; 44(3): 430-431.


Web Style

Amatul Aisha Rahman. Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries? . https://www.rmj.org.pk/?mno=302644394 [Access: December 07, 2023].


AMA (American Medical Association) Style

Amatul Aisha Rahman. Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries? . RMJ. 2019; 44(3): 430-431.



Vancouver/ICMJE Style

Amatul Aisha Rahman. Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries? . RMJ. (2019), [cited December 07, 2023]; 44(3): 430-431.



Harvard Style

Amatul Aisha Rahman (2019) Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries? . RMJ, 44 (3), 430-431.



Turabian Style

Amatul Aisha Rahman. 2019. Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries? . Rawal Medical Journal, 44 (3), 430-431.



Chicago Style

Amatul Aisha Rahman. "Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries? ." Rawal Medical Journal 44 (2019), 430-431.



MLA (The Modern Language Association) Style

Amatul Aisha Rahman. "Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries? ." Rawal Medical Journal 44.3 (2019), 430-431. Print.



APA (American Psychological Association) Style

Amatul Aisha Rahman (2019) Is Patient Safety need or luxury in developing countries? . Rawal Medical Journal, 44 (3), 430-431.