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Showing results for tags 'Communication'.
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Content ArticlePosters submitted to the Learning from Excellence Conference. The posters were grouped into three sessions, based on the topic of the poster and the session theme.
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Content ArticleIn this interview for Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare, Andrea Truex, chief nursing officer of Englewood Community Hospital, Florida, talks about how focusing on communication can enhance patient safety.
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Content ArticleThis qualitative study in Patient Education and Counseling collected narrative accounts from doctors, nurses and patients to determine whether their perspectives can add new content to quality of care frameworks. The three groups raised the following 'quality of care' aspects: Successful communication among staff, with patients and care companions Staff motivation Frequency of knowledge errors Prioritisation of patient-preferred outcomes Institutional emphasis on building “quality cultures” Organisational implementation of fluid system procedures The study found that respondents primarily referred to care processes, rather than structure or outcomes, in their descriptions of 'quality of care'. 'Hippocratic pride' (in response to care successes) and 'rapid reactivity' (in response to (near) failures) emerged as two new outcome indicators of high-quality care.
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Content ArticleThis study in the Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety examines the impact of using unclear or misleading abbreviations on medication prescribing errors. This study analysed Medmarx data from 2004 to 2006 to determine the prevalence and impact of errors related to abbreviations. Despite dissemination of the Joint Commission's “do not use” abbreviation list, errors involving these abbreviations occurred more than 18,000 times during the study period, although few patients were harmed as a result.
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Content Article
Positive patient safety: how Mustard can help
HelenH posted an article in Improving patient safety
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Content ArticleThis is a presentation given by the Quality and Safety Department at the Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust to the Patient Safety Management Network on 22 October 2021. It provides an overview of how they have been developing the Trust’s approach to patient safety, focusing on safety culture, learning for improvement and aiming to raise the profile of patient safety within their organisation.
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Content ArticleNumerous studies show a link between a positive safety culture (where safety is a shared priority) and improved patient safety within a healthcare organisation. The evidence is so convincing that the US National Patient Safety Foundation (NPSF) lists leadership support for a safety culture as the most important of eight recommendations for achieving patient safety. This overview from the Emergency Care Research Institute (ECRI) provides guidance and recommendations on how to embed approaches to safety culture within healthcare organisations.
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Content ArticleIn this blog, Claire Cox, Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Manager at Guys and St Thomas' Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, explains why and how she developed the Patient Safety Management Network. She looks at why the network is needed, what it has achieved so far, its aims for the future and how patient safety managers can get involved.
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Content ArticleThis systematic review in The Journal of Advanced Nursing aimed to synthesise current knowledge about the impact of safety briefings on improving patient safety. The authors found that safety briefings achieved beneficial outcomes and can improve safety culture. Beneficial outcomes included: improved risk identification. reduced falls. enhanced relationships. increased incident reporting. ability to voice concerns. reduced length of stay.
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Content ArticleVariation in healthcare processes is widespread in mental health care and can lead to inefficient processes and unnecessarily long inpatient stays. This study in The British Journal of Healthcare Management aimed to identify sources of variation and introduce a huddle intervention to increase system efficiency on a psychiatric inpatient ward in London. The study found that huddles are a useful way to improve staff communication and increase ward efficiency without taking up a significant amount of clinicians' time.
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Content ArticleA Patient Safety Huddle is a brief multidisciplinary daily meeting held to discuss threats to patient safety and actions to mitigate risk. This evaluation of The Huddle Up for Safer Healthcare (HUSH) project in BMC Health Services Research aims to assess the impact on teamwork and safety culture of the project, which implemented PSHs in 92 wards at five hospitals, across three NHS Trusts. This paper also seeks to add to the evidence-base around huddles as a mechanism for improving safety.
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Content ArticleThis blog by consultancy firm Gallup highlights seven questions leaders should ask to about their huddles, to ensure they are effective in improving patient safety and preventing staff burnout.
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Content ArticleThis short article describes how maternity and neonatal teams across Herefordshire and Worcestershire Local Maternity and Neonatal System (LMNS) have been using video conferencing technology to drive safety improvements for mothers and babies, thanks to the launch of their new daily digital safety huddles.
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Content ArticleIn this blog for the Nursing Times, Fiona Hibberts, head of the Nightingale Academy and consultant nurse at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, discusses the importance of huddles in improving patient safety and care, and in providing emotional support for staff. The author describes a huddle as "a gathering of key individuals, at a given time, to briefly discuss safety aspects of care of a group of patients in real time, escalate concerns and make plans," and highlights their importance for staff morale during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Content ArticleThis systematic review in BMJ Quality & Safety looks at existing research into the impact of hospital-based safety huddles. The authors found that while there are many anecdotal accounts of successful huddle programmes, there is not yet much high-quality peer-reviewed evidence regarding the effectiveness of hospital-based safety huddles. They suggest that additional rigorous research is needed to enhance collective understanding of how huddles impact patient safety and other outcomes. The review proposes a taxonomy and standardised reporting measures for future studies, to enhance comparability and evidence quality.
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Evaluation of huddles: a multisite study (1 July 2017)
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Techniques
This article in The Health Care Manager examines the value of 'huddles' - regular, interdisciplinary group meetings - in improving communication among disciplines, resolving problems and sharing information. The authors found that the primary function of huddles was the exchange of information that posed or had the potential to pose safety risks to patients. Staff reported that huddles were useful in improving awareness of safety concerns and also improved communication between disciplines.- Posted
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Ineffective medical device recalls are a patient safety scandal
Kath Sansom posted an article in Women's health
A medical device is any piece of equipment, material or apparatus used to diagnose or treat a medical condition. When a medical device is recalled because of safety concerns, it can affect a large number of patients, often on a global scale. However, manufacturers and regulators of these devices don’t often have effective ways to ensure patients know about safety concerns, understand the risks or know what to do if their medical device is recalled. This blog by Kath Samson, founder of the Sling the Mesh campaign, looks at some of the issues around medical device recalls. She suggests ways that device manufacturers and regulators can improve their communication with patients and healthcare staff when a medical device is recalled.- Posted
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Organisational culture and patient safety poster
Hugh Wilkins posted an article in Good practice
Poster presented by hub topic lead, Hugh Wilkins, at the MPEC 2021 Conference.- Posted
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- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleThis case study looks at how implementing a daily emergency call safety huddle at Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust has increased efficiency in team working and improved patient safety. A safety huddle is a short multidisciplinary briefing, held at a predictable time and place, and focused on the patients most at risk. By implementing the ten-minute daily safety huddle, the medical emergency and cardiac arrest teams improved patient outcomes and staff experience, and were able to make better use of resources.
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Content ArticleThis blog for the High Reliability Organizing website looks at the implications of 'preoccupation with failure' for individuals and organisations. The author highlights examples of how preoccupation with failure, as first described by Karl Weick and Kathleen Sutcliffe, can improve outcomes and reduce costs in healthcare organisations and in other sectors. She identifies barriers to organisations engaging with the process, including reluctance to look for 'hidden failures' and poor communication.
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Article: Culture, kinship and intelligent kindness (2013)
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Culture
This article by Penny Campling for the Royal College of Psychiatrists suggests that cultivating a culture of 'intelligent kindness' within the NHS will result in more safe and humane care. The author proposes a 'virtuous circle of compassionate care' and highlights systemic barriers that prevent organisations achieving this ideal. She argues that to create this virtuous circle, healthcare professionals need to acknowledge - and consciously work against - structures that undermine kindness. This requires a greater understanding the emotional impact of healthcare work, an acknowledgement that market culture undermines compassionate care and a renewed focus on relationships between professionals.- Posted
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Content ArticleThis study in BMJ Open considers how the usefulness of internal whistleblowing is affected by other institutional processes in healthcare organisations. The authors examine how the effectiveness of formal inquiries (in response to employees raising concerns) affects the utility of whistleblowing. The study used computer simulations to test the utility of several whistleblowing policies in a variety of organisational contexts. This study found that: organisational inefficiencies can have a negative impact on the benefits of speaking up about poor patient care where resources are limited and reviews less efficient, it can actually improve patient care if whistleblowing rates are limited including 'softer' mechanisms for reporting concerns (for example, peer to peer conversation) alongside whistleblowing policies, can overcome these organisational limitations.
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- Whistleblowing
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Content ArticleIn this blog for NHS Providers, National medical director's clinical fellow Cian Wade writes about his work with the NHS Improvement national patient safety team on reducing healthcare inequalities. Responding to commitments in the NHS Long Term Plan, this work focuses on two main areas: Determining the extent and causes of unequal experiences of clinical harm among different patient groups. This involved working with patient groups and system leaders to map patient journeys that demonstrate how and why some patients are at heightened risk of harm. Identifying areas for development that may help reduce health inequalities around patient safety. This second phase is in progress and involves gathering input on specific interventions that may reduce the risk of harm.
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- Health inequalities
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Content Article
The empty chair, a blog by Dr Chris Tiplady
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Blogs
In this blog Dr Chris Tiplady, consultant haematologist at Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, talks about the importance of building relationships with patients, carers and relatives. When a patient's family member dies, it leaves an empty chair in the consultation room and brings a sense of unexpected loss. Dr Tiplady reflects that throughout the pandemic, empty chairs have become a very common sight and he encourages readers to see these empty chairs as a reminder: "They should remind you to talk, to enquire over who should be in that chair, to have the conversations that need to be had, to recognise the relationships we all have that support us and that make our days better."- Posted
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- Communication
- Patient / family involvement
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