Part,  Chapter, Paragraph

 1    I,     2. 10.  4|      benefits: reducing medication errors, preventing counterfeiting,
 2    I,     2. 10.  4|         transparency.~ ~Medication errors~ ~More than 30% of all adverse
 3    I,     2. 10.  4|         consequences of medication errors8. Several studies in different
 4    I,     2. 10.  4|         significance of medication errors. For example: in the UK,
 5    I,     2. 10.  4|            day due to adverse drug errors9. Around 10% of admissions
 6    I,     2. 10.  4|     adverse event, with medication errors being first (37.4% of such
 7    I,     2. 10.  4|           events). 10~ ~Medication errors are rarely the fault of
 8    I,     2. 10.  4|         associated with medication errors, respectively standing at
 9    I,     2. 10.  4|           half of the prescription errors are intercepted by nurses
10    I,     2. 10.  4|          only 2% of administration errors are intercepted.~ ~Automating
11    I,     2. 10.  4|    significantly reduce medication errors. Numerous studies have shown
12    I,     2. 10.  4|          for preventing medication errors. For example, the introduction
13    I,     2. 10.  4|           of 74% in administration errors (from 3.10% to 0.84%)11.
14    I,     2. 10.  4|     pharmacy found that dispensing errors were reduced by 67% from
15    I,     2. 10.  4|          possibility of medication errors and counterfeiting.~ ~Standards
16    I,     2. 10.  4|        without any restrictions or errors.~ ~Local needs are incorporated
17   II,     8.  2.  2|          by uncorrected refractive errors. Refractive errors can be
18   II,     8.  2.  2|      refractive errors. Refractive errors can be easily diagnosed,
19   II,     8.  2.  2|         responsible for refractive errors remaining uncorrected: lack
20   II,     8.  2.  2|  inadequately corrected refractive errors is defined as visual acuity
21   II,     8.  2.  2|  inadequately corrected refractive errors has also been carried out (
22   II,     8.  2.  2|  inadequately corrected refractive errors has also been carried out (
23   II,     8.  2.  2|  inadequately corrected refractive errors. Disaggregated data need
24   II,     8.  2.  2|            children for refractive errors are carried out at community
25   II,     8.  2.  2|          by uncorrected refractive errors in 2004 Bulletin of the
26  III,    10.  2.  1|          due to random measurement errors and, at the same time, increasing
27   IV,    11.  1.  2|       public perception of medical errors as well as an earlier Eurobarometer
28   IV,    11.  1.  5|            of harm through medical errors via the promotion of a culture
29   IV,    11.  1.  5|         financial costs of medical errors. The Agency operates an
30   IV,    11.  1.  5|        negative impacts of medical errors. An example comes from the
31   IV,    11.  1.  5|         lives and money.~ ~Medical errors~ ~Medical errors present
32   IV,    11.  1.  5|           Medical errors~ ~Medical errors present a significant, although
33   IV,    11.  1.  5| professional and patients. Medical errors result in approximately
34   IV,    11.  1.  5|    although estimates suggest that errors occur in about 10% of hospitalizations
35   IV,    11.  1.  5|       fatalities from prescription errors were found to have increased
36   IV,    11.  1.  5|              One study highlighted errors in prescribing medications
37   IV,    11.  1.  5|            hospital, reported four errors per 1,000 medication orders,
38   IV,    11.  1.  5|     Weingart et al, 2000). Medical errors have been attributed to
39   IV,    11.  1.  5|         professionals, but medical errors also arise from poor design
40   IV,    11.  1.  5|         the actual size of medical errors remains difficult.~ ~Not
41   IV,    11.  1.  5|          even deaths. In addition, errors lead to intangible costs,
42   IV,    11.  1.  5|      public perceptions of medical errors in Europe was released in
43   IV,    11.  1.  5|  perceptions associated to medical errors and experiences pertaining
44   IV,    11.  1.  5|          EU citizens found medical errors to be an important problem
45   IV,    11.  1.  5|   likelihood of perceiving medical errors as an important problem.
46   IV,    11.  1.  5|        often than medicine-related errors. When looking at trust levels
47   IV,    11.  1.  5|          demonstrates that medical errors are perceived by Europeans
48   IV,    11.  1.  5|   responsible for avoiding medical errors, the patient is also seen
49   IV,    11.  6.  5|    preliminary taxonomy of medical errors in family practice." Quality
50   IV,    11.  6.  5|           2003): "Types of medical errors commonly reported by family
51   IV,    11.  6.  5|              Eurobarometer Medical Errors." Retrieved 26 June, 2006,
52   IV,    11.  6.  5|         1997): "Factors Related to Errors in Medication Prescribing."
53   IV,    11.  6.  5|         and mortality from medical errors: an increasingly serious
54   IV,    11.  6.  5|       severity of intravenous drug errors." British Medical Journal
55  Key,   Ap5.  0.  0|          erectile~erection~erosion~errors~escherichia~Estonia~estrogen~