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Showing results for tags 'Communication'.
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Content Article
Five tips to improve wellbeing and communication
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Good practice
Here are five simple tips on how to improve wellbeing and communication by changing how you start and end each day and week positively. Shared by Robin Davis on Twitter.- Posted
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- Organisational culture
- Staff support
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Content ArticleIn this study, Aniza Ismail and Norhani Mazrah Khalid assessed the baseline level and mean score of every domain of patient safety culture among healthcare professionals at a cluster hospital in Malaysia and identifed the determinants associated with patient safety culture. The study found that healthcare professionals at the cluster hospital showed unsatisfactory patient safety culture levels. Most of the respondents appreciated their jobs, despite experiencing dissatisfaction with their working conditions. The priority for changes should involve systematic interventions to focus on patient safety training, address the blame culture, improve communication, exchange information about errors and improve working conditions.
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Content ArticleThe aim of integrated care is to improve people’s outcomes and experiences of care by bringing services together around people and communities. This means addressing the fragmentation of services and lack of co-ordination that people often experience by providing person-centred, joined-up care. This practical guide aims to provide partners working in integrated care systems (ICSs) with ideas on how they can ensure they identify and meet the needs of the people they serve.
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- Integrated Care System (ICS)
- Communication
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Content Article
NHSE - Always Events®
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in NHS England
Always Events are defined as “those aspects of the patient and family experience that should always occur when patients interact with healthcare professionals and the health care delivery system”. NHS England has been leading an initiative for developing, implementing, and spreading an approach to reliably integrate Always Events into routine frontline services. Always Events® is a co-production quality improvement methodology which seeks to understand what really matters to patients, people who use services, their families and carers and then co-design changes to improve experience of care. Genuine partnerships between patients, service users, care providers, and clinicians are the foundation for co-designing and implementing reliable solutions that transform care experiences with the goal being an “Always Experience.” This webpage contains: information on the Always Events national programme Always Events toolkit Evaluation of Always Events Always Events film- Posted
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- Quality improvement
- Methodology
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Content ArticleCo-production is a way of working that involves people who use health and care services, carers and communities in equal partnership; and which engages groups of people at the earliest stages of service design, development and evaluation. This poster by NHS England and the Coalition for Personalised Care outlines five values and seven practical steps to help create a culture where co-production becomes an integral part of health systems and organisations.
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- Patient engagement
- Transparency
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Content ArticleThink Local Act Personal (TLAP) is a national partnership of more than 50 organisations committed to transforming health and care through personalisation and community-based support. TLAP developed the Making It Real framework to support good personalised care for providers, commissioners and people who access services. These "I" statements are part of Making It Real, and they articulate what good care and support looks like if you are someone who accesses services.
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- Communication
- Patient engagement
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Content ArticleThis guideline describes good patient experience for babies, children and young people, and makes recommendations on how it can be delivered. It aims to make sure that all babies, children and young people using NHS services have the best possible experience of care. It includes recommendations on: overarching principles of care communication and information planning healthcare consent, privacy and confidentiality advocacy and support improving healthcare experience, including healthcare environments accessibility, continuity and coordination
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- Children and Young People
- Baby
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Content ArticleThis National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guideline covers the components of a good patient experience. It aims to make sure that all adults using NHS services have the best possible experience of care. It includes recommendations on: knowing the patient as an individual. essential requirements of care. tailoring healthcare services for each patient. continuity of care and relationships. enabling patients to actively participate in their care, including communication and information.
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Content ArticleSafety conversations are an important step in building a proactive patient safety culture. They’re a respectful discussion about safety between two or more people involved in organising, delivering, and seeking or receiving care. This collection of tools and resources, from quick tip sheets to comprehensive reports and frameworks, aims to help healthcare professionals to have effective safety conversations and support safer care of older adults.
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- Canada
- Communication
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Content ArticleThis publication reflects on how a digital strategy can help to improve patient experience from scheduling appointments to methods of communication. Authors, Becker’s Hospital Review and RevSpring, outline the competitive advantage this can give and the importance of understanding patient preferences.
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- Digital strategy
- Communication
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Content ArticleThis guide is aimed at policymakers and communicators whose efforts may be frustrated by false narratives and misinformation. In healthcare, that can apply to important issues such as vaccination and mask-wearing, as well as to spurious 'cures' for serious illnesses. But the techniques explored in the guide can also apply to more day-to-day matters such as handwashing in healthcare settings. The starting point is the 'wall of beliefs' - the various influences from which we construct our belief systems, and, to some extent, our personal identities. The point here is that belief is not simply built on facts. It also comes from social conventions, peer pressure, religious faith and more. The guide offers a strategy matrix, based on understanding how strongly or weakly beliefs are held, and whether the resulting behaviour is harmful or not. A corresponding set of tactics looks at incentives and barriers for desired behaviour, along with communications that can address harmful beliefs without backing the intended audience into a corner.
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- Communication
- Communication problems
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Content Article
Considering Valproate video (February 2022)
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Medication
Sodium valproate is a medication used to treat epilepsy, bipolar disorder and migraines, but it can cause birth defects, learning disabilities and developmental problems in babies if taken during pregmamcy. This video by Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust discusses the various effects of using valproate, including the potential harmful effects the medication can have on unborn foetuses. It features a conversation between a pharmacist and patient discussing the need for a valproate pregnancy prevention programme if the patient is to be prescribed valproate.- Posted
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- Medication
- Pregnancy
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Content ArticleThe REACH Toolkit provides information, resources and quality improvement (QI) tools for managers and clinicians to improve patient, carer and family recognition and escalation of clinical deterioration in NSW health services. The resources can be adapted to suit local needs including initial program implementation, to review and improve current practices or to support current practice.
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- Patient / family involvement
- Patient engagement
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Content ArticleREACH is a system that helps patients, carers and family members to escalate their concerns with staff about worrying changes in a patient's condition. It stands for Recognise, Engage, Act, Call, Help is on its way. REACH was developed by the New South Wales Government Clinical Excellence Commission in collaboration with local health districts and consumers. It builds on the surf life‐saving analogy for recognition and appropriate care of deteriorating patients by encouraging patients, carers and their families to 'put their hands in the air' to signal they need help.
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- Deterioration
- Patient
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Content ArticleRyan Saunders is a little boy who died in 2007 from an undiagnosed streptococcal infection, which led to Toxic Shock Syndrome. According to the Queensland Clinical Excellence Division, when Ryan’s parents were worried he was getting worse, they did not feel their concerns were acted on in time. This blog outlines Ryan's Rule, a process introduced by the Queensland Department of Health to try and prevent similar events happening in future. Ryan's Rule allows patients and their families and carers to escalate serious concerns about their own or a family member's condition.
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- Deterioration
- Sepsis
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Content ArticleMedical records include any information about your physical or mental health recorded by a healthcare professional. This includes hospital staff, GPs, dentists and opticians. This page on The Patients Association website explains how to get copies of your medical records in England and Wales. It provides information on: How to get your GP records Using the NHS App to access records A guide to formally requesting medical records Requesting the records of someone who has died Seeing a child’s medical records Requesting the records of a vulnerable adult More information on medical records Complaints
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- GP
- Electronic Health Record
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Content Article
Understanding Covid-19 as a vascular disease and its implications for exercise
Anonymous posted an article in Blogs
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- 4 comments
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- Long Covid
- Treatment
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Content ArticleIn this article for The Times, Deborah Ross describes her negative experience of NHS maternity care during and after labour, and how this has put her off having more children. During her 72-hour labour and subsequent hospital admission, she was denied pain relief, did not feel listened to and was not informed as to why her baby had been transferred to NICU.
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Content Article
Blog - Positivity in adversity (24 October 2022)
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Patient stories
Matt Eagles was only seven when he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. Now an adult, Matt uses his experiences of healthcare, to help other patients learn how to better communicate with healthcare professionals. In this blog, he talks about his experiences of living with Parkinson's and the work he does to raise awareness of the condition.- Posted
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- Parkinsons disease
- Children and Young People
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Content ArticleThere are over 850 Freedom to Speak Up guardians in NHS primary and secondary care and independent sector organisations, national bodies and elsewhere who work to ensure workers can speak up about any issues which have an impact on their ability to do their job. For Speak Up month, the National Guardian Office find out more about the people behind the role in the 'Stuck in a lift' interviews.
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- Speaking up
- Whistleblowing
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Content ArticleThis is part of our series of Patient Safety Spotlight interviews, where we talk to people working for patient safety about their role and what motivates them. Kathy tells us about the importance of breaking down barriers to share patient safety tools, and talks about changes she has implemented to make surgery safer.
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- Nurse
- Operating theatre / recovery
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Content ArticleThis series of short articles by the Nuffield Trust looks at common criticisms of the NHS, and provides evidence as to why they are untrue. The articles look at the following four interrelated arguments: We already spend too much on our health and despite this our outcomes are poor The NHS is a ‘sacred cow’ and has not been reformed We should copy other countries and adopt a social insurance model There is not enough use of competition and choice
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- Healthcare
- Data
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Content ArticleThe failure to consider the needs of diverse groups of people badly impacts experience of care. Sarah Sweeney, Head of Policy at National Voices points out how the NHS needs to change the way it communicates with people regarding care.
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- Communication
- Patient engagement
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Content ArticleThe Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) is reviewing its approach to engagement with healthcare professionals to improve the safety of medicines and medical devices. It wants to ensure that healthcare professionals are receiving actionable information and guidance on safe use of medicines and medical devices that they can take into their working practice, providing timely advice to patients. The MHRA wants to hear from you to enable them to transform how they communicate with you and how they work together with you for the common goal of greater patient safety. The consultation closes 18 January 2023.
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- Medication
- Medical device
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Content ArticleThis article in The BMJ by Tessa Richards, Senior Editor for patient partnership and Henry Scowcroft, Patient Editor, looks at the way in which people with expertise rooted in lived experience were excluded from policy decisions during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. They argue that engaging patients, families, and frontline health and social care professionals would have prevented some of the excess morbidity and mortality that came from policy responses to the pandemic, particularly among elderly people, those with long term conditions and those in lower socioeconomic groups.
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- Patient engagement
- Pandemic
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