Abstract

The summer 2023 issue of Patient Safety is available to read online and download at no charge. This issue features two in-depth data analyses from the largest event reporting database of its kind in the United States, which reveal patient safety trends in serious events and incidents (https://patientsafetyj.com/article/74752-patient-safety-trends-in-2022-an-analysis-of-256-679-serious-events-and-incidents-from-the-nation-s-largest-event-reporting-database) and offer insights on healthcare-associated infections (https://patientsafetyj.com/article/74494-long-term-care-healthcare-associated-infections-in-2022-an-analysis-of-20-216-reports) in Pennsylvania last year. We also share some recent healthcare success stories in recognition of the winners of the 2023 I AM Patient Safety awards. Additional highlights include • A safety alert about methylprednisolone (https://patientsafetyj.com/article/77633-patient-safety-alert-methylprednisolone-and-patients-with-hypersensitivity-to-cow-s-milk-components), a medication that sometimes contains lactose monohydrate, and its risk of anaphylaxis, a life-threating allergic reaction, to patients with a cow’s milk allergy. • An expert on artificial intelligence discusses what AI can and can’t do in healthcare (https://patientsafetyj.com/article/77632-artificially-intelligent-machine-learning-in-healthcare-and-why-it-may-not-be-as-advanced-as-you-think), now and in the future. • Human factors researchers review best practices from high-risk industries (https://patientsafetyj.com/article/77769-informing-visual-display-design-of-electronic-health-records-a-human-factors-cross-industry-perspective) that may inform visual display design of electronic health records. • How an evidence-based teaching plan (https://patientsafetyj.com/article/77630-evidence-based-teaching-plan-test-and-evaluation-on-caring-for-healthcare-provider-second-victims) might raise awareness of the effect that significant patient and employee crises have on the staff who witness such events. • A study explores the feasibility of monitoring patients’ vital signs (https://patientsafetyj.com/article/77776-continuous-monitoring-of-vital-signs-after-hospital-discharge-a-feasibility-study) at home. Patient Safety is fully open access (no fees for authors or readers). We welcome manuscripts from all over the world. If your work can help advance patient safety, please submit it to us for consideration (https://patientsafetyj.com/for-authors), and kindly share our journal with friends, family, colleagues, and caregivers.

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