
James recalls, “I took one look at those paddlers and asked, ‘How do I do that?’ ” Back to top The Mother (Mantra) of Dragons He became enamored after seeing boats race at the annual Hong Kong Dragon Boat Festival in Queens, New York.ĭragon boats typically hold 22 people: 20 paddlers, a drummer (to keep everyone in sync), and a helmsperson. Founded in 2012, the team is the brainchild of the Employee Wellness Group and James Lozada, an MSK clinical research auditor.īefore the Dragons, James raced with another team. Sullivan and the Sullivan Group here.James Lozada, coach of the MSK Dragons and clinical research auditorĪmong the enthusiasts are the MSK Dragons, the dragon boat team at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK). His lectures on heuristics, human factors engineering, and EMR medical liability have been instrumental in shaping the discussion between clinicians and IT administration for many healthcare organizations across the country. Sullivan has directed a significant amount of his attention towards redesigning EMR applications to improve patient safety and clinical workflow.

Given the recent era of healthcare IT, Dr.

Award for Excellence in Health Policy and ACEP's Outstanding Speaker of the Year Award. Sullivan's passion and vision for patient safety has garnered him the respect of his peers while earning ACEP's Colin C. Over the past 25 years, he has delivered hundreds of patient safety lectures for clinical leaders across the country at many annual industry forums, including the Annual American Society of Healthcare Risk Management (ASHRM) Conference and the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Scientific Assembly. Sullivan is revered by many as a luminary within the healthcare risk management and patient safety industries. Staff Pictures- The Sullivan Group, Oakbrook Terrace Octo© Michael Hudson, All Rights Reservedĭr. Since wrong or delayed diagnoses cause more wrong serious harm to patients than any other type of medical error, leveraging AI is the most promising way to reduce diagnostic error. Utilizing AI allows us to bring these risk and safety elements to the bedside. While I enjoy lecturing, unfortunately, it does not lead to a sustained change in clinical practice that keeps patients and providers safe. This real-time clinical feedback helps physicians avoid medical errors before they become an adverse event or malpractice claim.įor the last 30 years, I have taught risk and safety to 4,000 medical directors and tens of thousands of emergency practitioners. Additionally, the algorithms help identify possible high-risk conditions and passively notifies the practitioner of a 'Risk Identified.' Importantly, ED Guidance for Dragon Medical Advisor also fits comfortably within the practitioner workflow. ED Guidance for Dragon Medical Advisor specifically targets the most common diagnosis-related errors.ĮD Guidance for Dragon Medical Advisor drives clinical alignment around elements in the history, physical exam, and medical decision-making that improve diagnostic certainty. Leveraging 30 years of data into the root causes of the failure to diagnose, Nuance partnered with The Sullivan Group to develop ED Guidance for Dragon Medical Advisor, an AI-based decision support tool. The authors of this study concluded succinctly that their findings allow us to 'target diagnostic improvement initiatives to diseases with the highest error and harm rates.'Īdditional studies outline the failure to diagnose profile demonstrates omission of elements in history taking, physical exams, and medical decision-making.


These diseases require a consistent, thorough evaluation that focuses on the history and exam's diagnostic features that should prompt the practitioner to include the condition in the differential diagnosis. identified that 15 diseases account for about half of all serious misdiagnosis-related harms.The research focused on the 'Big Three' categories of vascular events, infections, and cancers and found that 10% of patients with a 'Big Three' disease are misdiagnosed.Ī likely explanation for this result is that practitioners encounter these conditions infrequently, are not familiar with the variable presentations, and are prone to cognitive errors in the diagnostic process. Sullivan, MD, JD, FACEPĪ 2020 study by Newman-Toker, et al. This blog post was created by Nuance guest blogger, Daniel J.
