for Patient Safety (SPS) network focuses on improving safety in outpatient (ambulatory) settings, especially in pediatric care. Key emphasis areas include Solutions for Patient Safety:
- Ambulatory Foundations: Establishing baseline structures and engaging patients/families to reduce harm.
- Ambulatory CLABSI: Strategies to detect and reduce central-line-associated bloodstream infections in outpatient populations like oncology patients on parenteral nutrition.
- Ambulatory Incubator: Small cross-disciplinary teams (incubators) developing and testing quality improvement interventions to reduce ambulatory harms.
2. Ambulatory Care Patient Safety – Broader Perspective
A deeper dive into patient safety in ambulatory (outpatient) care highlights systemic risks and improvement pathways:
- A roadmap published in JAMA revealed that ambulatory settings see a median of 2–3 safety incidents per 100 primary care visits, commonly related to administrative delays, communication breakdowns, diagnostic errors, and medication mishaps. Annually, up to 5% of outpatients experience diagnostic errors, and millions of outpatient visits may involve adverse drug events PMC.
- Additional research points to the complexity of diagnostic processes, noting that failure to close feedback loops (e.g., referrals and test result follow-ups) can significantly compromise patient safety—especially in chronic and oncology care settings PSNetWikipedia.
Summary Table
| Topic | Details |
|---|---|
| SPS Ambulatory Safety Focus | Foundations, CLABSI prevention, Incubator teams for harm-reduction strategies (pediatric-focused). Solutions for Patient Safety |
| Broader Ambulatory Safety Risks | Medication errors, diagnostic delays, communication failures. Notable incidence rates and contributing factors highlighted in JAMA review. PMCPSNetWikipedia |
How Can I Help Further?
- Are you looking for courses or training materials on ambulatory patient safety via Neftaly? (I found some Neftaly materials on other topics like SAQA-aligned training and occupational safety—but not specifically on ambulatory patient safety).
- Would you like case studies, tools, or guidelines to implement safety improvements in your outpatient setting?
- Or maybe you’re seeking professional development or certification related to this domain?
Let me know what direction you’re leaning toward—I’m happy to dig deeper!
Sources


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