05-29-2026, 01:10 PM
[center]![[Image: d1f2390231b60e27d6a6a2c7a3e7b1ae.jpg]](https://i127.fastpic.org/big/2026/0529/ae/d1f2390231b60e27d6a6a2c7a3e7b1ae.jpg)
Medication Safety Overview
Published 5/2026
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Language: English | Duration: 34m | Size: 366.46 MB[/center]
Medication Safety Essentials: Errors, Reporting, HAM & LASA
What you'll learn
Define medication safety and explain its impact on patient outcomes and healthcare quality.
Identify the role and responsibilities of the Medication Safety Officer (MSO) within healthcare organizations.
Differentiate between active failures, latent failures, and human behavior types that contribute to medication errors.
Recognize various types of medication errors, including near misses and sentinel events, and understand the importance of reporting.
Apply key error‑prevention strategies, such as standardization, automation, forcing functions, and fail‑safes.
Distinguish High‑Alert Medications (HAM) and LASA drugs, and describe best practices for safe storage and labeling.
Requirements
NO prerequisites for taking your course
Description
This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.
Medication safety is a critical component of high‑quality healthcare, and understanding how medication errors occur-and how to prevent them-is essential for every healthcare professional. This course provides a comprehensive and practical introduction to the principles of medication safety, the role of the Medication Safety Officer (MSO), and the systems and strategies used to reduce preventable harm in healthcare organizations.
Throughout this course, students will explore the foundations of medication safety, including definitions, key concepts, and the impact of medication errors on patient outcomes. You will learn how healthcare systems contribute to both safe and unsafe practices, and how human factors, system failures, and behavioral patterns influence medication‑use processes.
The course also covers essential topics such as active and latent failures, human error versus at‑risk and reckless behaviors, and the Swiss Cheese Model. Students will gain a clear understanding of medication error reporting systems, near misses, sentinel events, and the importance of building a Just Culture that supports learning and accountability.
Additionally, the course provides detailed guidance on High‑Alert Medications (HAM), Look‑Alike Sound‑Alike (LASA) drugs, and evidence‑based error‑prevention strategies such as standardization, automation, forcing functions, redundancies, and system redesign.
Whether you are a pharmacist, nurse, physician, quality professional, or a healthcare leader, this course equips you with the knowledge and tools needed to improve medication safety and contribute to safer patient care.
Who this course is for
Healthcare professionals involved in medication use, including pharmacists, nurses, and physicians.
Medication Safety Officers (MSOs) or those aspiring to move into medication safety roles
Quality, Risk Management, and Patient Safety staff seeking to strengthen their understanding of medication‑related risks.
![[Image: d1f2390231b60e27d6a6a2c7a3e7b1ae.jpg]](https://i127.fastpic.org/big/2026/0529/ae/d1f2390231b60e27d6a6a2c7a3e7b1ae.jpg)
Medication Safety Overview
Published 5/2026
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Language: English | Duration: 34m | Size: 366.46 MB[/center]
Medication Safety Essentials: Errors, Reporting, HAM & LASA
What you'll learn
Define medication safety and explain its impact on patient outcomes and healthcare quality.
Identify the role and responsibilities of the Medication Safety Officer (MSO) within healthcare organizations.
Differentiate between active failures, latent failures, and human behavior types that contribute to medication errors.
Recognize various types of medication errors, including near misses and sentinel events, and understand the importance of reporting.
Apply key error‑prevention strategies, such as standardization, automation, forcing functions, and fail‑safes.
Distinguish High‑Alert Medications (HAM) and LASA drugs, and describe best practices for safe storage and labeling.
Requirements
NO prerequisites for taking your course
Description
This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.
Medication safety is a critical component of high‑quality healthcare, and understanding how medication errors occur-and how to prevent them-is essential for every healthcare professional. This course provides a comprehensive and practical introduction to the principles of medication safety, the role of the Medication Safety Officer (MSO), and the systems and strategies used to reduce preventable harm in healthcare organizations.
Throughout this course, students will explore the foundations of medication safety, including definitions, key concepts, and the impact of medication errors on patient outcomes. You will learn how healthcare systems contribute to both safe and unsafe practices, and how human factors, system failures, and behavioral patterns influence medication‑use processes.
The course also covers essential topics such as active and latent failures, human error versus at‑risk and reckless behaviors, and the Swiss Cheese Model. Students will gain a clear understanding of medication error reporting systems, near misses, sentinel events, and the importance of building a Just Culture that supports learning and accountability.
Additionally, the course provides detailed guidance on High‑Alert Medications (HAM), Look‑Alike Sound‑Alike (LASA) drugs, and evidence‑based error‑prevention strategies such as standardization, automation, forcing functions, redundancies, and system redesign.
Whether you are a pharmacist, nurse, physician, quality professional, or a healthcare leader, this course equips you with the knowledge and tools needed to improve medication safety and contribute to safer patient care.
Who this course is for
Healthcare professionals involved in medication use, including pharmacists, nurses, and physicians.
Medication Safety Officers (MSOs) or those aspiring to move into medication safety roles
Quality, Risk Management, and Patient Safety staff seeking to strengthen their understanding of medication‑related risks.
Code:
https://nitroflare.com/view/A3D15CBFA711444/Medication_Safety_Overview.rar
https://rapidgator.net/file/3036eb33d4d8d48bc27a74150541eaa4/Medication_Safety_Overview.rar.html

