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Showing results for tags 'Communication'.
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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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- 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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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
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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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Content ArticlePatient lead users can be defined as patients or relatives who use their knowledge and experience to improve their own or a relative’s care situation and/or the healthcare system, and who are active beyond what is usually expected. This study in the BMJ Open aimed to explore patient lead users’ experiences and engagement during the early Covid-19 pandemic in Sweden, from 1 June to 14 September 2020. The authors recruited 10 patient lead users living with different long-term conditions and undertook qualitative in-depth interviews with each of them. They found that health systems were not able to fully acknowledge and engage with the resource of patient lead users during the pandemic, event though they could be a valuable resource as a complementary communication channel.
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- Pandemic
- Qualitative
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Content Article
Raising awareness of surgical menopause
Anonymous posted an article in Women's health
World Menopause Day is held every year on 18 October to raise awareness of the menopause and the support options available for improving health and wellbeing. In this blog, I want to raise awareness of surgical menopause, which affects over 4000 young women a year, specifically around the lack of information and support received before and after surgery.- Posted
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- Menopause
- Surgery - Obs & Gynae
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Content ArticleThis webpage has been put together by The Patients Association to provide resources for patients and members of the public who want to start a local campaign about a specific issue related to health and social care. It includes: advice on how to campaign. information on who you should contact. template letters to MPs and other officials.
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- Patient engagement
- Patient
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Content ArticleAccess useful case studies as well as the NHS Confederation's latest reports, blogs, podcasts and the ICS Communications Toolkit.
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- Integrated Care System (ICS)
- Collaboration
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Content ArticleThe journalist Merope Mills voices her anger at her daughter Martha's preventable death in this Woman's Hour programme.
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- Patient / family involvement
- Patient engagement
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Content ArticleThis guide by the charity Menopause Support offers advice for women who may be experiencing menopause symptoms about how to approach an appointment with their GP. It covers preparing for the appointment with research, making a note of your symptoms, how to ask questions, taking a friend or family member to support you, and further support you can request during the consultation.
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- Womens health
- Menopause
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Content Article
Pausitivity - Know your menopause poster
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Women's health
This simple poster highlights the main symptoms of the menopause including hot flushes. headaches, mood swings, palpitations and tiredness. It encourages women to recognise the symptoms and seek help from their GP.- Posted
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- Menopause
- Information sharing
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Content ArticleThe Health and Care Act 2022 will establish the Healthcare Safety Investigations Branch (HSIB) as the Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB) in April 2023, a fully independent arm’s-length body. This blog by Dr Sean Weaver, Deputy Medical Director at HSIB, outlines what HSSIB's new powers will be.
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- Investigation
- Safety culture
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Content ArticleTransitions of care between hospital departments are necessary, but they may disrupt care coordination, such as discharge planning. Family carers often serve as liaisons between the patient and healthcare professionals, but they frequently experience exclusion from care planning during intrahospital transfers (IHTs). This has the potential to decrease their awareness of patients’ clinical status, postdischarge needs and carer preparation. This study aimed to explore family carers’ perceptions about IHTs, patient and carer ratings of patient discharge readiness and carer self-perception of preparation to engage in at home care.
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- Discharge
- Transfer of care
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Content Article
Communication in the operating theatre (14 November 2013)
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Surgery
Communication is extremely important to ensure safe and effective clinical practice. This systematic literature review of observational studies addressing communication in the operating theatre aimed to gain an understanding of actual communication practices, rather than what was reported through recollections and interviews. In all of the studies reviewed, communication was found to affect operating theatre practices. Further detailed observational research is needed to gain a better understanding of how to improve the working environment and patient safety in theatre.- Posted
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- Communication
- Teamwork
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Content Article
Mother knows best – a blog by Dr Abha Agrawal
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Patient stories
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- 1 comment
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- Patient / family involvement
- Patient engagement
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Content ArticleVideo recording technologies offer a powerful way to document what happens in clinical areas. Cameras, and to a lesser extent, microphones, can be found in a growing number of modern operating rooms in the USA, UK and other parts of the world. While they could be used to create a detailed record of what happens in and around the operating table, this is still rarely being done; the vast majority of operations are still only documented in written operation notes. In this paper, Bezemer et al. discuss using microanalysis of videos from the operating room.
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- Operating theatre / recovery
- Surgery - General
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Content ArticleThis paper in the journal Social Science & Medicine reports from an ethnographic study of hospital planning in England between 2006 and 2009. The authors explored how a policy to centralise hospital services was promoted in national policy documents, how this shifted over time and how it was translated in practice. They found that policy texts defined hospital planning as a clinical issue and framed decisions to close hospitals or hospital departments as based on the evidence and necessary to ensure safety. They argue that this clinical rationale is sometimes a false reframing of a political motivation, that it constrains public participation in decisions about the delivery and organisation of healthcare, and that it restricts the extent to which alternatives can be considered.
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- Organisational culture
- Communication
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Content ArticleThis mixed method case study in The BMJ aimed to evaluate a national programme to develop and implement centrally stored electronic summaries of patients’ medical records. The authors found that creating individual summary care records (SCRs) was a complex, technically challenging and labour intensive process that occurred more slowly than planned. They concluded that complex interdependencies, tensions and high implementation workload should be expected when rolling out SCRs.
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- Electronic Health Record
- Communication
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Content ArticlePatient safety in ambulatory care settings is receiving increased attention. Based on interviews and focus groups with patients, providers, and staff at ten patient-centered medical homes, this qualitative study explored perceived facilitators and barriers to improving safety in ambulatory care. Participants identified several safety issues, including communication failures and challenges with medication reconciliation, and noted the importance of health information systems and dedicated resources to advance patient safety. Patients also emphasised the importance of engagement in developing safety solutions.
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- Primary care
- GP
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Content ArticleRealistic Medicine is Scotland's approach to a sustainable health and social care system. The Realistic Medicine Podcast shares the stories, experiences and projects of teams and communities across Scotland. In this episode, Dr Graham Kramer, National Clinical Lead for Self Management and Health Literacy, talks about health literacy and the importance of people being able to understand and engage in their own health and healthcare.
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- Health literacy
- Social determinants of health
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