Article Title,Year,Volume,Issue,Page Range,Author General practice critical incident reviews of patient suicides: benefits barriers costs and family participation,2005,14,1,18-25,Kendall Recommendations for promoting the engagement of older people in activities to prevent falls,2007,16,3,230-234,Hauer Intensive care unit nurses' perceptions of safety after a highly specific safety intervention,2008,17,1,25-30,Elder Causes of preventable drug-related hospital admissions: a qualitative study,2008,17,2,109-116,Avery Use of a falls incident reporting system to improve care process documentation in nursing homes,2008,17,2,104-108,Wagner Ambulance stretcher adverse events,2009,18,3,213-216,Fairbanks Emergency care of older people who fall: a missed opportunity,2006,15,6,390-392,Roberts Estimates of injury risks for healthcare personnel working night shifts and long hours,2009,18,5,336-340,Dembe Sequential monitoring of hospital adverse events when control charts fail: the example of fall injuries in hospitals,2009,18,6,473-477,Clements Bridging the gap between research and practice: review of a targeted hospital inpatient fall prevention programme,2009,18,6,467-472,Barker Applying root cause analysis to improve patient safety: decreasing falls in postpartum women,2010,19,2,138-143,Su Falls in English and Welsh hospitals: a national observational study based on retrospective analysis of 12 months of patient safety incident reports,2008,17,6,424-430,Thomson Learning from tragedies: clinical lessons from the ClimbiƩ report,2003,12,2,82-83,Marcovitch Treating the clock and not the patient: ambulance response times and risk,2006,15,2,127-130,Price Risks and suggestions to prevent falls in geriatric rehabilitation: a participatory approach,2011,20,5,440-448,Vieira From research to practice: factors affecting implementation of prospective targeted injury-detection systems,2011,20,6,527-533,Sorensen From aviation to medicine: applying concepts of aviation safety to risk management in ambulatory care,2003,12,1,35-39,Wilf-Miron Pasteur and parachutes: when statistical process control is better than a randomized controlled trial,2005,14,2,140-143,Diaz