About Us | FAQ | Contact | Advertise  | RSS Feed
Subscribe to this feed
ADVANCE for Administrators of the Laboratory RSS Feed
Search
Login | Sign Up

Current Issue

Subscriptions are FREE to qualified Administrators of the Laboratory


References

References for "The Value of Laboratory Medicine, Part III"


Print ArticleEmail Article

1.   Howanitz PJ. Errors in Laboratory Medicine: practical lessons to improve patient safety. Arch Pathol Lab Med 2005; 129, 1252-61.

2.    Lippi, G., Guidi, G. C., Mattiuzzi, C. & Plebani, M. (2006) Preanalytical variability: the dark side of the moon in laboratory testing. Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine, 44, 358-365.

3.   Goldschmidt HMJ, Lent RW. Gross errors and work flow analysis in the clinical laboratory. Klin Biochem Metab 1995;3:131-40.

 4.  Plebanl M, Cerlotti F, Messeri G, Ottomano C, Pansinl N, Bonini P. Laboratory network of excellence: enhancing patient safety and service effectiveness. Clin Chem Lab Med 2006;44:150-60.

5.   Nutting PA. Main DS. Fischer PM, Stull TM, Pontious M, Seifert M Jr, Boone DJ, Holcomb S. Toward optimal laboratory use. Problems in laboratory testing in primary care. JAMA 1996 Feb 28;275(8):635-96   

6.   Plebani M. Errors in clinical laboratories or errors in laboratory medicine? Clin Chem LabMed 2006;44:750-759.

7.   Laboratory Medicine: A National Status Report. Prepared for: Division of Laboratory Systems, National Center for Preparedness, Detection, and Control of Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Prepared by: The Lewin Group Under subcontract to Battelle Memorial Institute, May 2008

8.   Bonini P, Plebani M, Ceriotti F, et al. Errors in laboratory medicine. Clin Chem 2002;48:691-8.

9.   Forsman RW. Why is the laboratory an afterthought for managed care organizations? Clin Chem 1996;42:813-6.

10. Young DS and Bermes EW. Preanalytical variables and Biological variations. Chapter 17, Tietz Textbook of Clinical Chemistry ands Molecular Diagnostics, Burtis CA, Ashwood ER, Bruns DE (eds), 4th edition, WB Suanders, 2006.

11. Young DS, Bermes EW and Haverstick DM. Specimen collection and processing. Chapter 2,Tietz Textbook of Clinical Chemistry ands Molecular Diagnostics, Burtis CA, Ashwood ER, Bruns DE (eds), 4th edition, WB Suanders, 2006.

12.  ISO/lEC Guide 73: 2002. Risk management-vocabulary­ guidelines for use in standards.

13. Plebani M. Errors in laboratory medicine and patient safety: the road ahead. Clin Chem Lab Med 2007;45:700-7.

14. ISO 9000 essentials. International Organization for Standardization. Geneva, Switzerland. http://www.iso.org/iso/iso_catalogue/management_standards/iso_9000_iso_14000/iso_9000_essentials.htm

15. ISO 9000. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO9000

16. ISO 15189:2003 (revised 2007). Medical laboratories -particular requirements for quality and  competence. International Organization for Standardization. Geneva, Switzerland. http://www.iso.org/iso/iso_catalogue/catalogue_tc/catalogue_detail.htm?csnumber=42641

17. ISO/PTDS 22367. Medical laboratories - Reduction of error through risk management and continual improvement - complementary elements [Draft, August 2005]

18. ISO/TS 22367:2008(E) © ISO 2008. First edition 2008-05-01. ANSI order X_104193. Downloaded 1/27/2009. https://mail.roswellpark.org/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://webstore.ansi.org/RecordDetail.aspx?sku=ISO%252fTS%2B22367%253a2008

19. ISO 9001: 2008. International Organization for Standardization. Geneva, Switzerland    http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=46486

20. Application of a quality management system model for laboratory services. Approved guideline: GP26-A3; third edition. Wayne, PA: Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute, 2004.

21. A quality management system model for health care. Approved guideline: HS1-A2; second edition. Wayne, PA: Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute, 2004.

22. Nevalainen D, Berte L, Kraft C, et al. Evaluating laboratory performance on quality indicators with the six sigma scale. Arch Pathol Lab Med 2000;124(4):516-9.

23. Riebling NB, Condon S, Gopen D. Toward error free lab work. ASQ Six Sigma Strategy Forum Magazine 2004;4(1):23-29.

24. Continuous quality improvement: integrating five key quality system components. Approved guideline: GP22-A2; second edition. Wayne, PA: Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute, 2004.

25. Saxena S, Wong ET. Does the emergency department need a dedicated stat laboratory? Continuous quality improvement as a management tool for the clinical laboratory. Am J Clin Pathol 1993;100(6):606-10.

26.  The launch of Shared Visions-New Pathways. Jt Comm Perspect 2004;24(1):1-3.

27.  Saxtena S, Kempf R, Wilcox S, et al. Critical laboratory value notification: a failure mode effects and criticality analysis. Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety 2005;31(9):495-506.

28. Donabedian A. The quality of care. How can it be assessed? Arch Pathol Lab Med 1997;121:m1145-50

29. Lippi G, Bassi A, Brocco G, Montagnana M, Salvagno GL, Guidi GC. Preanalytic error tracking in a laboratory medi­cine department: results of a 1-year experience. Clin Chem 2006; 52:1442-3.

30. Lippi G, Salvagno GL, Montagnana M, Franchini M, Guidi GC. Phlebotomy issues and quality improvement in results of laboratory testing. Clin Lab 2006;52 (5-6): 217-30      

31.  Lippi G. Governance of Preanalytical Variability and Error Detection. JMB 2008; 27 (3): 337-338

32. Salvagno GL, Lippi G, Bassi A, Poli G, Guidi GC. Prevalen­ce and type of pre-analytical problems for inpatients sam­ples in coagulation laboratory. J Eval Clin Pract 2008; 14: 351-3.

33. Lippi G, Bassi A, Solero GP, Salvagno GL, Guidi Gc. Prevalence and type of preanalytical errors on inpatient samples referred for complete blood count. Clin Lab 2007; 53: 555-6.