ADVISORY/Experts Available To Discuss Requiring Bar Coding To Reduce Medication Errors.Business Editors ADVISORY... --(BUSINESS WIRE) TOPIC: The Food and Drug Administration plans to require bar codes on patients' prescriptions to ensure that hospital patients are receiving the right medication at the right time, according to an article by The Washington Post. Hospitals can reduce medication errors by matching a bar code on a prescription label to the code on the patient's wristband. The Institute of Medicine released a report in 1999 that stated 770,000 people are injured due to medication errors each year. EXPERTS: ExpertSource can offer several highly qualified experts to comment on this story: John B. Grotting, MHA--an expert on the use of barcoding in healthcare to prevent medication, blood transfusion blood transfusion, transfer of blood from one person to another, or from one animal to another of the same species. Transfusions are performed to replace a substantial loss of blood and as supportive treatment in certain diseases and blood disorders. and other medical errors, as well as other patient safety topics--is president and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of Bridge Medical, an AmerisourceBergen company. Grotting's 28 years of healthcare leadership experience includes executive experience at the $2.6-billion Allina Hospitals & Clinics in Minneapolis, Minn. He and Bridge are known throughout the industry for such award-winning efforts as Bridge's MedPoint patient safety system and the "Beyond Blame" documentary which first drew attention to the problem of medication errors medication error Malpractice An error in the type of medication administered or dosage. See Adverse effect, Error. . One of the founders of the National Alliance for Health Information Technology, Grotting has been a national media spokesperson for NAHIT NAHIT National Alliance for Health Information Technology , whose first initiative is to barcode all medications to protect patients. PR: Carol B. Somer, csomer@bridgemedical.com, 858-314-5538 or cell: 858-204-7424 Russell "Rusty rust·y adj. rust·i·er, rust·i·est 1. Covered with rust; corroded. 2. Consisting of or produced by rust. 3. Of a yellowish-red or brownish-red color. 4. " Lewis is SVP/COO of Bridge Medical, and heads the R&D arm of the company, which is dedicated to the development of barcode-enabled, point-of-care (BPOC BPOC Bar Code Point of Care BPOC Bedside Point of Care BPOC Barcode-enabled Point of Care (technology/device) BPOC Bell Point of Contact BPOC Beef Promotion Operating Committee BPOC Before Proceeding on Course ) patient safety software systems for use in hospitals, as well as systems that mine data gathered to provide information that can help providers, insurers, payors, pharmaceutical firms and governmental agencies, maximize clinical and financial outcomes of medication use. He is also the author of a new HIMSS HIMSS Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society book on Barcoding and BPOC that will be published shortly. Prior to joining Bridge, Lewis served as SVP SVP S'il Vous Plaît (French: Please) SVP Senior Vice President SVP Schweizerische Volkspartei (Swiss People~s Party) SVP Society of Vertebrate Paleontology SVP Social Venture Partners SVP St Vincent de Paul and chief technology officer of HBOC HBOC HBO & Co of Georgia HBOC Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer HBOC Hemoglobin-Based Oxygen Carrier HBOC Hawke's Bay Orienteering Club (New Zealand) HBOC Hunter Bird Observers Club HBOC Horse Breeders and Owners Conference and McKesson's Information Technology Business. The Microsoft Healthcare Users Group (MS-HUG MS-HUG Microsoft Healthcare Users Group ) board member has been involved for more than 15 years in research and product development for America's leading technology companies, and is the holder of more than 20 U.S. and international patents. PR: Carol B. Somer, csomer@bridgemedical.com, 858-314-5538 or cell: 858-204-7424 Mark Neuenschwander is one of the nation's leading barcode experts and principal of the Neuenschwander Company. He will discuss "Bedside Scanning Technologies: Issues and Value" during National Patient Safety Awareness Week. PR: Carol B. Somer, csomer@bridgemedical.com, 858-314-5538 or cell: 858-204-7424. On Mar. 12-15, at the Renaissance Washington D.C. Hotel, close to one thousand healthcare professionals from all over the U.S. and other countries, representing a variety of disciplines, will join the National Patient Safety Foundation in "standing up for safety" during National Patient Safety Awareness Week. ExpertSource cannot guarantee the immediate availability of these experts or their familiarity with this specific issue. ExpertSource provides academic and industry experts to the media at no charge. Journalists are encouraged to submit queries to ExpertSource when seeking experts on specific subjects. An online registration form is available at http://www.businesswire.com/ifmd/index.html. |
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