Follow us on:

Contact Us / Join Our Mailing List

Would you like to be on our email list and receive our Newsletters and other timely information?

Do you want to get more involved in our efforts?

Would you like a follow up phone call to discuss an issue or to learn more about the organization?

For more information about the Connecticut Center for Patient Safety please fill out this form and either mail it to the address below or click the submit button at the bottom of this page:

Lisa Freeman
Executive Director
Connecticut Center for Patient Safety
857 Post Road #220
Fairfield, CT 06824

First Name*

Last Name*

Address1

Address2

City*

State*

Zip Code*

Phone

Email*

Re-enter Email

Tell Us Your Story

What year did this happen: 

Was it in a: Doctor's office, Hospital, or Other?

Name of hospital, or Doctor, or facility

Have you experienced a medication error? Yes     No

Were you misdiagnosed? Yes     No


If you contracted an infection while hospitalized:

What area of the hospital:
Was it following surgery? Yes     No
How many days did the infection add to the hospital stay?
Did you find out about the infection after you left the hospital? Yes     No
What was the name of the infection?
Do you know where the infection started? Catheter    Surgical Site    Other


Describe your experience in your own words:


I would like to become involved CTCPS’s work. (We will contact you.)

I would like to receive a follow-up phone call to discuss an issue or learn more about your organization

I would like to submit a guest blog or an article for your newsletter for your consideration. (We will contact you.)

Additional comments or message:

Your email address and the information contained in this form will be used to respond to you and to add you as a member of the Connecticut Center for Patient Safety. That membership will include our regular Newsletter and several special emails each year. Your email address is not collected for commercial marketing purposes and we will not sell or distribute your email address for commercial marketing purposes.

Contact Us / Phone

203.610.0610

Health Care Blog

Three Vaccines for Fall: What You Need to Know
According to the NY Times, here’s who should get the flu, Covid and R.S.V. vaccines, and when. By Ap…
Continue Reading »

How the Inflation Reduction Act Reduces Health Care Costs
CAP American Progress ARTICLE AUG 12, 2022  Nicole Rapfogel & Emily Gee The Inflation Reduction …
Continue Reading »

Hospital Visitation Restrictions Are Hurting Patients and Nurses — New protocols and COVID mitigation techniques can enable safe visitation
Medpage Today |  by Karen Cox, PhD, RN, and Tejal K. Gandhi, MD, MPH September 2, 2021 As COVID…
Continue Reading »


Becoming a More Empowered Patient

First, we have chosen to share a video by Consumer Health Choices: Talking With Your Doctor. In it you will see how preparing for you appointment can make a difference.

We have chosen a second video by the National Patient Safety Foundation: AskMe3, to share with you. Here, you learn that there are three important questions to ask your doctor whenever you see him or her.

Finally, we are sharing a series of videos by Dartmouth-Hitchcock:
Self-Advocacy: The Empowered Patient,
Self-Advocacy: Preparing for your Visit,
Self-Advocacy: Why It's Important To Share and
Self-Advocacy: Doing Research.

For the complete story, please click here

5 Things to Know

  1. What you need to know in the Hospital
  2. 15 Steps You Can Take To Reduce Your Risk of a Hospital Infection
  3. Selecting Doctors & Hospitals
  4. What to do to avoid medication error
  5. AHRQ Director Helps Consumers Navigate the Health Care System in a New Advice Column on the Web

You've Suffered Medical Harm - Now What Do You Do?

According to a recent article published by ProPublica titled: So You’ve Become a Patient Safety Statistic – Now What? by Marshall Allen there are six things to do….

  1. Get a copy of medical records.
  2. Make sure the incident is reported internally.
  3. If the patient has died, order a forensic autopsy.
  4. Consider calling an attorney.
  5. Meet with the doctor and hospital officials.
  6. Report the incident to regulators, who can investigate.

For greater detail and more important information, please read the full article.