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Showing results for tags 'Bullying'.
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Content ArticleSimon Fleming discusses in BMJ Opinion why he launched an anti-bullying campaign. Simon is a trainee orthopaedic surgeon and PhD Candidate at Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry.
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Content ArticleSome of the serious findings of external reviews of NHS services from recent years, previously unpublished, have been released to HSJ. An HSJ investigation has found the NHS has kept secret dozens of external reviews into care failings in local services including: A hospital where surgery may have “shortened life expectancy”. An alleged “cartel” of private patients said to be put on NHS lists. “Very high risk” consultant on-call arrangements. Problems with fetal heart monitoring in a maternity service. Potentially unnecessary operations being carried out. Rows among doctors putting patients at risk. Read their full report below.
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Further serious patient safety incidents: why are staff still not being listened to when concerns are raised?
Anonymous posted an article in Whistle blowing
Due to COVID-19 and the safety issues the pandemic is highlighting, I have decided to write a sequel to my previous blog 'Dropped instrument, washed and immediately reused'. I am writing this because it recently came to my notice from colleagues that safety is once again being compromised in the same private hospital where my shifts were blocked after I reported a patient safety incident.- Posted
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Content ArticleThis report is the outcome of a six-month study into workplace culture at Whittington Health NHS Trust. Central to the study is an exploration of perceived bullying and harassment and their relationship, if any, to ideas of a common workplace culture. It is important to emphasise that this is a study and not an enquiry. The researchers have no jurisdiction to suggest sanctions or actions, instead to report and advise on what they have found and to make any recommendations where appropriate. The study deployed a mixed-methods approach of staff survey and over 120 hours of one-to-one interviews mainly resulting in contacts generated by the survey. This is a cross-sectional study – a snapshot in a moment in time from a sample of staff at Whittington Health NHS Trust.
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Content ArticleThis Review was set up in response to continuing disquiet about the way NHS organisations deal with concerns raised by NHS staff and the treatment of some of those who have spoken up. The aim of the Review was to provide advice and recommendations to ensure that NHS staff in England feel it is safe to raise concerns, confident that they will be listened to and the concerns will be acted upon.
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The right – and duty – of NHS staff to speak up
Hugh Wilkins posted an article in Whistle blowing
A blog from hub topic lead Hugh Wilkins on the recent messages from NHS England and NHS Improvement leaders reminding everyone, including those at board level, of the duty and right of staff to speak up about anything which gets in the way of patient care and their own wellbeing. Hugh highlights the real risk of reprisals against some staff who have raised concerns in the public interest, and points out that much needs to change before NHS staff can be sure that it is safe for them to speak up.- Posted
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Content ArticleHow people are treated following their involvement in a workplace accident can have far reaching implications for both the individual and the organisation. This paper, published by Science Direct, examines the impact the use of retributive justice mechanisms within the accident analysis process have on both the individual and the organisation. It analyses the perceptions of those involved in five accidents where retributive justice mechanisms were used. The study of these cases shows retributive justice mechanisms used as part of the accident analysis process negatively impacts three key areas; (1) the mental health of the individual; (2) organisational learning and; (3) organisational performance. The study also illustrates that the language used as part of the accident analysis has a significant impact upon the perception of the process and the willingness to participate.
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The lifecycle of the whistleblower (8 February 2020)
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Whistle blowing
Roger Kline, Consultant on Workforce Culture, describes the “lifecycle” of a whisltleblower and the stages and steps they will go through. It's one many whistleblowers will recognise in part or in full.- Posted
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Content ArticleThis pay-walled article, published in The Sunday Times, highlights serious concerns raised by staff at West Suffolk Hospital around: unfair reprisal and treatment of staff who raise valid patient safety concerns a prioritisation of reputation over patient safety bullying behaviour from executives and management. Further reading: I thought Daniel was safe with the NHS, he wasn't (March 2020)
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Content ArticleThe latest NHS national staff survey is out. It shows, yet again, that an extraordinary proportion of NHS staff report being bullied or harassed at work by managers and colleagues last year (2019). Roger Kline, Research Fellow in Middlesex University London Business School, discusses the shocking level of bullying in the NHS and the impact this has on staff.
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Content ArticlePeter Duffy, consultant surgeon writes of his 35 years of experience on the front-line of the NHS. Charting his career pathway from auxiliary nurse and unskilled operating theatre orderly, he takes us through his progress to senior consultant surgeon and head of department. In 2015, and after blowing the whistle on a series of near misses, he reluctantly reported an avoidable death, cover-up and ongoing surgical risk-taking to the Care Quality Commission. Within months he was out of work and unemployed. Via avoidable deaths and errors, cover-ups, misuse of public funds, bullying, abuse and victimisation the author charts out in searing detail his demotion, punishments and exile from both family and NHS and the subsequent brutal legal process that followed his illegal dismissal.
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Content ArticleResponding to the Paterson Inquiry, Ian Kennedy, Emeritus Professor of Health Law and Policy at University College London, discusses the systemic weaknesses in the NHS.
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Content ArticleCathe Gaskell, from The Results Company, presented at the recent Bevan Brittan Patient Safety Seminar on incivility in healthcare and the impact this has on patient safety. Attached are her presentation slides
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Content ArticleWorkplace bullying (WPB) is a physical or emotional harm that may negatively affect healthcare services. The aim of this study, published in Human Resources for Health, was to determine to what extent healthcare practitioners in Saudi Arabia worry about WPB and whether it affects the quality of care and patient safety from their perception.
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My thoughts on the Paterson Inquiry: a blog from a scrub theatre nurse
Anonymous posted an article in By health and care staff
I recently wrote a blog for the hub on my experience as a theatre scrub nurse in private healthcare, and what happened to me when I reported a surgeon for dropping an instrument on the floor and reusing it without sterilising it. Following the Paterson Inquiry, I see many similarities in the behaviour and the culture of surgeons and staff in operating theatres. I'd like to share my thoughts.- Posted
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Content ArticleIn this podcast, Peter Duffy, Consultant Urologist, addresses University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Foundation Trust (UHMBT). He speaks of the significant and damaging challenges faced by himself and others who raise concerns about patient safety, including bullying, harassment and abuse. He argues that whistleblowers are suffering personally and professionally when they speak up on behalf of patients. Duffy states: "There remain safety critical issues that the governors need to hold the Board to account over, if the Board is to regain the full confidence of staff and patients".
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Post mortem of a career (March 2019)
Claire Cox posted an article in By health and care staff
Dr Joanna Poole is an Anaesthetic trainee and a Doctors Association UK (DAUK) member. After sharing a blog on Twitter about wanting to quit medicine which went viral, Joanna has been inundated with messages from fellow doctors who have found themselves in a similar situation. Now, Joanna has been invited to share her experiences with multiple Royal Colleges and Joanna is collating the responses she has received anonymously in the hope this will inspire a kinder NHS for our doctors. Joanna is a force for change and is a real example for what grassroots doctors can achieve when they speak up.- Posted
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#NHSMeToo
Claire Cox posted an article in Motivating staff
The NHS is Britain’s greatest treasure. Yet it still harbours a culture of hierarchy where bullying, harassment and appalling training environments can go unchallenged. The Doctors Association UK (DAUK) believe that bullying, and discouraging victims from speaking up, goes hand in hand with a blame culture. Often doctors are shamed into silence, and don’t realise other doctors are struggling just as much as they are. Morale is at an all time low in the NHS, with rates of burnout and sadly, even physician suicide on the rise. DAUK are teaming up with the Royal Colleges as part of a wider NHS anti-bullying alliance and are encouraging doctors to speak about their experiences.- Posted
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Content ArticleAn independent review report looking at cultural issues related to allegations of bullying and harassment in NHS Highland by John Sturrock, QC and mediator. *Update on the progress with the Sturrock Review Actions, including a report on the Argyll & Bute Culture Survey and plans for the launch of the Healing Process, and consolidation of Lessons Learned and findings of the Independent Review Panel has been added to this page as attachments below.
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Content ArticleWe put a lot of trust in the medical profession. We are usually going to the doctor at our most vulnerable—when we don’t feel well, something is wrong, and we need help. It can be a frightening experience that can become a frustrating or even dangerous one when medical concerns are minimized or dismissed. However, there are steps patients can take to advocate for themselves in a medical setting to reduce the risk of medical gaslighting.
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Content ArticleIn this blog the Safer Healthcare and Biosafety Network and Patient Safety Learning reflect on the results of the NHS Staff Survey 2020, considering how staff safety relates to patient safety in the context of this.
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Content Article"The inestimable, magnificent, Will Powell speaking on Radio Ombudsman about the long struggle to discover the truth about his son's death and the subsequent failure of accountability mechanisms" - Rob Behrens, Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman UK, Vice-President IOI Europe, Visiting Professor UCL. MCFC.
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- Medication
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