Summary
The report published this week by Great Ormond Street Hospital, showing that surgeon Yaser Jabbar harmed close to 100 children between 2017 and 2022, should be an urgent wake-up call for the NHS, writes James Titcombe in a commentary for HSJ. The Great Ormond Street scandal exposes a growing imbalance in NHS patient safety policy. In moving away from blame, the system has also lost sight of individual competence, leadership responsibility, and the non-negotiables needed to prevent serious harm. James wants leaders to:
- Foster a problem-sensing culture in which safety concerns are reported, escalated, and acted upon.
- Ensure systems are in place to proactively monitor and benchmark safety performance.
- Ensure evidence-based practices and interventions known to reduce patient safety risk are implemented.
- Learn meaningfully from previous harm – moving beyond the rhetoric of “lessons learned” to auditable actions and demonstrable change.
- Be honest with patients and the public when things go wrong, and be proactively open about known risks.
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