Summary
This study examined how service users, carers, and healthcare providers conceptualise ‘patient safety’ in community-based mental healthcare.
Four key themes were developed, reflecting contrasting conceptualisations of safety in this care context, where participant thinking evolved throughout discussions.
- ‘Systemic inertia: threats to safety’ characterises the entrenched, systemic challenges which rendered participants powerless to advocate for or deliver safe care.
- ‘Managing the risks service users present’ equates ‘safe care’ to the mitigation of risks service users may pose to themselves or others when unwell, or risks from those around them.
- ‘More than responding to risks: everyone plays a role in creating safety’ recognises providers’ agency in causing or proactively preventing patient harm.
- ‘The goals of ‘safety’: our destination is not yet in sight’ positions safety as a work in progress, calling for ambitious safety agendas, giving primacy to goals which meaningfully improve service users’ lives.
What does ‘safe care’ mean in the context of community-based mental health services? A qualitative exploration of the perspectives of service users, carers, and healthcare providers in England (11 September 2024)
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-024-11473-3
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