Summary
The 7th Global Ministerial Summit for Patient Safety, organised by the Department of Health of the Republic of the Philippines and co-sponsored by the World Health Organization (WHO), takes place on 3-4 April 2025 in Manila. This event focuses on advancing international efforts to improve healthcare quality and safeguard patients worldwide. It brings together global leaders, experts and stakeholders to discuss and shape the future of patient safety.
Content
Global Ministerial Summits on Patient Safety aim to drive forward the global patient safety movement. Beginning in 2016, they have helped to keep patient safety high on policy makers’ agendas and helped the build the momentum needed to create the first World Health Organization (WHO) Global Patient Safety Action Plan, published in August 2021.
This year’s Summit in Manilla seeks to support the implementation of the Global Patient Safety Action Plan, embracing the theme "Weaving Strengths for the Future of Patient Safety Throughout the Healthcare Continuum." The event highlights the current implementation progress, showcasing diverse approaches and strategic plans adopted by countries. The Summit will include discussions around:
- The role of patient engagement in bridging patient safety gaps.
- Diagnostic safety.
- Leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) and technology for patient safety.
- Creating psychologically safe and healthy workplaces.
- Investing in patient safety for sustainable healthcare.
There will be sessions across the two days looking at each of these issues, within the broader context of integrating patient safety in all aspects of healthcare delivery and at all levels of care as a foundation of resilient and sustainable healthcare systems.
To support the Global Ministerial Summit, Patient Safety Learning has pulled together some key resources from the hub around these key themes being discussed at the Summit.
Patient engagement
1 WHO: Patient safety rights charter
The Patient safety rights charter is a key resource intended to support the implementation of the Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021–2030: Towards eliminating avoidable harm in health care. The Charter aims to outline patients’ rights in the context of safety and promotes the upholding of these rights, as established by international human rights standards, for everyone, everywhere, at all times.
The role of Patient Safety Commissioner for England was created by the UK Government after a recommendation from the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review, chaired by Baroness Julia Cumberlege. The Patient Safety Commissioner acts as a champion for patients, leading a drive to improve the safety of medicines and medical devices. This blog provides an overview of a Patient Safety Partners Network meeting where members were joined by Professor Henrietta Hughes, Patient Safety Commissioner for England.
3 Providing patient-safe care begins with asking and listening... really listening!
Dan Cohen is an international consultant in patient safety and clinical risk management, and a Trustee for Patient Safety Learning. In this blog, Dan talks about how patient-safe care is all about collaborating and listening to your patients to find out what really matters to them. He illustrates this in a case study of his own personal experience whilst working as a clinician in the USA.
Diagnostic safety
4 The economics of diagnostic safety
Diagnosis is complex and iterative, therefore liable to error in accurately and timely identifying underlying health problems, and communicating these to patients. Up to 15% of diagnoses are estimated to be inaccurate, delayed or wrong. Diagnostic errors negatively impact patient outcomes and increase use of healthcare resources. This Health Working Paper from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) defines the scope of diagnostic error and illustrates the burden of diagnostic error in commonly diagnosed conditions. It also estimates the direct costs of diagnostic error and provides policy options to improve diagnostic safety.
5 Improving diagnostic safety in surgery: A blog by Anna Paisley
Good outcomes for surgical patients require accurate, timely and well-communicated diagnoses. In this blog, Anna Paisley, a Consultant Upper GI Surgeon, talks about the challenges to safe surgical diagnosis and shares some of the strategies available to mitigate these challenges and aid safer, more timely diagnosis.
6 How early diagnosis saves lives: case study on aortic dissection
In this blog, The Aortic Dissection Charitable Trust explains why timely and accurate diagnosis of aortic dissection is critical for saving lives. By sharing Martin’s recovery story, they illustrate the positive impact of prompt testing and treatment. The blog highlights the need to improve patient safety relating to aortic dissection, calling for increased education and awareness among healthcare professionals; improved clinical guidelines and protocols; and heightened vigilance in recognising and responding to the symptoms of aortic dissection.
Artificial intelligence (AI) and technology
In January 2024, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Lucian Leape Institute convened an expert panel to explore the promise and potential risks for patient safety from generative artificial intelligence (genAI). The report that followed summarises three user cases that highlight areas where genAI could significantly impact patient safety: in documentation support, clinical decision support and patient-facing chatbots.
8 AI in healthcare translation: balancing risk with opportunity
In an increasingly global healthcare environment, with patients and professionals from many different cultural and linguistic backgrounds, precision in medical document translation is key. In this blog, Melanie Cole, Translations Coordinator at EIDO Systems International, talks about the challenges, risks and opportunities for using AI in healthcare translation.
9 Integrated human-centred AI in clinical practice: A guide for health and social care professionals
This is a guide for designers, developers and users of AI in healthcare. It outlines general principles health and social care professionals should consider, a case study drawn from clinical practice and a directory of resources to find out more. It includes key questions that clinicians and AI developers need to answer together to ensure the best possible outcomes. It follows on from the CIEHF's White Paper, Human Factors in Healthcare AI, which sets out a human factors perspective on the use of AI applications in healthcare.
Psychological safety
10 Speak up for Safety: A new workshop for healthcare staff about the importance of Just Culture
The culture of a healthcare organisation can determine how safe its staff members feel to raise concerns about patient safety. Bella Knaapen, Surgical Support Governance & Risk Management Facilitator and Sarah Leeks, Senior Health & Wellbeing Practitioner at Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, have developed ‘Speak Up For Safety’, a Just Culture training workshop that aims to help staff, at all levels, understand the importance of creating an environment that encourages people to share concerns and feedback.
11 Balancing care: The psychological impact of ensuring patient safety
In this blog, Leah Bowden, a patient safety specialist, reflects on the impact her job has on her mental health and family life. She discusses why there needs to be specialised clinical supervision for staff involved in reviewing patient safety incidents and how organisations need to come together to identify ways we can support our patient safety teams.
12 Amy Edmonson: The importance of psychological safety
As a leader how can you foster a work environment where people feel safe to speak up, share new ideas and work in innovative ways? In this video from the Kings Fund, Amy Edmondson, Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at the Harvard Business School, talks about the importance of psychological safety in health and care and what leaders can do to create it.
Sustainability
13 The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh: Green Theatre Checklist
Healthcare services globally have a large carbon footprint, accounting for 4-5% of total carbon emissions. Surgery is particularly carbon intensive, with a typical single operation estimated to generate between 150-170kgCO2e, equivalent to driving 450 miles in an average petrol car. The UK and Ireland surgical colleges have recognised that it is imperative for us to act collectively and urgently to address this issue. The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh have collated a compendium of peer-reviewed evidence, guidelines and policies that inform the interventions included in the Intercollegiate Green Theatre Checklist. This compendium should support members of the surgical team to introduce changes in their own operating departments.
14 Communicating on climate change and health: Toolkit for health professionals
Communicating the health risks of climate change and the health benefits of climate solutions is both necessary and helpful. Health professionals are well-placed to play a unique role in helping their communities understand climate change, protect themselves, and realize the health benefits of climate solutions. This toolkit from WHO aims to help health professionals effectively communicate about climate change and health.
15 Climate change: why it needs to be on every Trust's agenda
The NHS has declared climate change a health emergency, but are trust leaders and healthcare staff talking and acting on this? Angela Hayes, Clinical Lead Sustainability at the Christie Foundation Trust and a hub Topic leader, discusses climate change and the impact it has on all of our lives and health. She believes healthcare professionals have a moral duty to act, to protect and improve public health, and should demand stronger action in tackling climate change.
If you would like to write a blog or have a resource to share on any of the themes highlighted in this blog, please get in touch. Contact the hub team at [email protected] to discuss further.
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