Summary
Dr Michael Leonard and Dr Allan Frankel explore how effective leadership and organisational fairness are essential for patient safety within healthcare services. They discuss how leaders can influence their organisations to help create a robust safety culture.
Content
Key points
- A robust safety culture is the combination of attitudes and behaviours that best manages the inevitable dangers created when humans work in complex environments.
- Great leaders know how to wield attitudinal and behavioural norms to best protect against these risks.
- These include:
- psychological safety – that is, an environment where no one is hesitant to voice a concern and caregivers know that they will be treated with respect when they do)
- organisational fairness – where caregivers know that they are accountable for being capable, conscientious and not engaging in unsafe behaviour, but are not held accountable for system failures
- a learning system in which engaged leaders hear patients and front-line caregivers’ concerns regarding defects that interfere with the delivery of safe care, and promote improvement to increase safety and reduce waste.
- Leaders are the keepers and guardians of these attitudinal norms and the learning system.
The Health Foundation: How can leaders influence a safety culture? (May 2012)
https://www.health.org.uk/publications/how-can-leaders-influence-a-safety-culture
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