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Found 139 results
  1. Content Article
    An increasing number of healthcare artificial intelligence (AI) applications are in development or already in use, but the safety impact of using AI in healthcare is largely unknown. This qualitative study in the journal Safety Science aimed to explore how different stakeholders (patients, hospital staff, technology developers and regulators) think about safety and the safety assurance of healthcare AI. Through a series of interviews, the authors assessed stakeholder perceptions of an AI-based infusion pump in the intensive care unit. Participants expressed perceptions about: the potential impact of healthcare AI requirements for human-AI interaction safety assurance practices and regulatory frameworks for AI and the gaps that exist how incidents involving AI should be managed. The authors concluded that there is currently a technology-centric focus on AI safety, and a wider systems approach is needed. They also identified a need for greater awareness of existing standards and best practice among technology developers.
  2. Content Article
    This Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors (CIEHF) webinar explores near misses in three different sectors and how controls can, or cannot, be developed to prevent future events.
  3. Content Article
    This literature review in The Operating Theatre Journal looks at 'How industry has helped healthcare better understand human factors'. The author, Nigel Roberts, Theatre Lead at the University Hospitals of Derby and Burton, looks at this question in relation to teamwork, leadership, situational awareness, communication and culture.
  4. Event
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    This free webinar will explore near misses in three different sectors and how controls can, or cannot, be developed to prevent future events. It will start with an introduction to the concept of near misses in healthcare and the challenges faced in learning from these near misses to improve safety. You will then hear how near misses are approached in rail and nuclear and how controls are developed in their processes. At this event, you’ll: Gain valuable insights from all three sectors: healthcare, rail and nuclear. Hear discussion about defining near misses with respect to controls. Learn how to build barriers in systems. Who will this be of interest to? This webinar will be of interest to anyone involved in the management of safety events in their industry/ organisation, and especially human factors practitioners, safety investigators, policy leads and regulators. Register
  5. Content Article
    This 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. Mark talks to us about how he came to work in healthcare, the vital role of safety scientists and human factors specialists in improving patient safety, and the challenges involved in integrating new technologies into the health system.
  6. Content Article
    This white paper is intended for non-specialists who may have little or no professional background in human factors and ergonomics but who are influential in the way decisions are made about the development and use of technology. The knowledge and guidance it contains is based on both fundamental scientific and applied research, as well as from deep study and learning from adverse events. The paper is based around nine principles that provide an easy-to-follow guide to human factors issues which need to be addressed when developing and implementing highly automated systems.
  7. Content Article
    This article in the journal Trends in Neurology & Men's Health provides an outline of the role of human factors in preventing harm in healthcare. The authors describe the scale of medical errors and look at some specific ways that changes to personal and team working factors can improve safety for staff and patients.
  8. Content Article
    In this blog Patient Safety Learning’s Chief Executive, Helen Hughes, discusses the connection between procurement, supply chains and patient safety, ahead of an upcoming Safety for All Campaign webinar on this topic.
  9. Content Article
    A key part of healthcare digital transformation is the development and adoption of artificial intelligence technologies. This article, published in BMJ Health & Care Informatics, considers how human factors and ergonomic principles can be applied to the use of artificial intelligence in healthcare.
  10. Content Article
    Loughborough University and the Chartered Institute of Ergonomics & Human Factors have been working on a Human Factors Healthcare Learning Pathway since the launch of the CIEHF White Paper in 2018 and it’s finally arrived.  The Learning Pathway is aligned to the National Patient Safety Syllabus and focusses on Human Factors. Human Factors is a broad, scientific, evidence-based discipline that can help people solve a wide range of problems that they face in what they do, every day. In understanding, for example, why patients struggle to use personal medical devices, the application of Human Factors in the design, implementation and evaluation of the devices or in the equipment we use, and the way people work, individually and together, will lead to more resilient, more productive, more connected and more sustainable systems and ways of working (see HEE and CIEHF report 'Human Factors and Healthcare').   Professor Sue Hignett, one of the developers of the course, explains more.
  11. Content Article
    Patients are increasingly encouraged to be active participants in managing their own health. New technologies, cultural shifts, trends in healthcare delivery and policies have brought the patients’ role in healthcare to the forefront. This session from the Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors (CIEHF) reviews and advances the emerging discipline of Patient Ergonomics. It focuses on patients and their performance. It presents practical recommendations and case studies useful for researchers and practitioners and covers diverse healthcare settings outside hospitals and clinics, providing a combination of foundational content and specific applications.
  12. Content Article
    Human factors and ergonomics (HF/E) is concerned with the design of work and work systems. There is an increasing appreciation of the value that HF/E can bring to enhancing the quality and safety of care, but the professionalisation of HF/E in healthcare is still in its infancy. In this paper, Sujan et al. set out a vision for HF/E in healthcare based on the work of the Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors (CIEHF), which is the professional body for HF/E in the UK. The authors consider the contribution of HF/E in design, in digital transformation, in organisational learning and during COVID-19.
  13. Content Article
    Loughborough University offers online accredited Healthcare Human Factors short courses to support the NHS Patient Safety Strategy and guide the learner into a new way of thinking about safety in healthcare. The professional Learning Pathway provides a complete programme for the Human Factors (Ergonomics) content in the Patient Safety Syllabus that you need to develop your knowledge and skills as a Safety Specialist, integrating both patient safety and staff wellbeing. By completing the pathway through to Level 3, you can achieve a professional qualification as a Human Factors Technical Specialist (TechCIEHF); or alternatively, you can use the individual online learning modules for CPD.
  14. Content Article
    This article by Lauren McGIll in The Walrus looks at how design changes to the trauma bay at St Michael's Hospital in Toronto are saving lives. Lack of intentional design in hospitals, new technologies and a culture that celebrates adaptability all contribute to what the author describes as "a piecemeal approach" to emergency medicine workspaces. The outcome of this is ultimately higher mortality rates as staff do not have an optimum working environment. The article describes a research project set up in 2015 by doctors Christopher Hicks and Andrew Petrosoniak, which aimed to identify and remove latent hazards and obstacles that cost trauma staff time in emergency situations. They redesigned the trauma bay at St Michael's hospital as a result of their findings, and early reports are that dramatic rescues have been possible thanks to the new layout. Petrosoniak says, “You cannot remove the stress of someone dying in front of you, but we can remove the stress of not being able to find equipment.” Further reading Trauma Resuscitation Using in situ Simulation Team Training (TRUST) study: latent safety threat evaluation using framework analysis and video review (BMJ Quality & Safety) Study protocol for a framework analysis using video review to identify latent safety threats: trauma resuscitation using in situ simulation team training (TRUST) (BMJ Open) Stress Testing the Resuscitation Room: Latent Threats to Patient Safety Identified During Interprofessional In Situ Simulation in a Canadian Academic Emergency Department (AEM Education and Training) Health professionals' experience of teamwork education in acute hospital settings: a systematic review of qualitative literature (JBI Evidence Synthesis)
  15. Content Article
    This webinar from the Chartered Institute of Ergonomics & Human Factors is about boosting organisational and personal performance by recognising, measuring and promoting wellness. It describes the development and application of indices to measure wellness using a 'Whole Life - Whole Organisation' approach.  Topics include: Ways for organisations to improve key performance indicators such as sales, productivity, customer service, reduction in accidents, quality, safety/liability, people retention, absence, presenteeism and levels of engagement/motivation Access to new software and management intelligence to support and implement a 3D next generation organisational improvement approach New certifications such as Certificate in Personal Performance - Wellness Management Global Wellness Indices for Healthcare, Hybrid Workers, Hazardous Industries and Universities (staff and students) New research and development and the growing international community of organisations and people active in Performance – Wellness – Health
  16. Content Article
    The Chartered Institute of Ergonomics & Human Factors (CIEHF) have published a new white paper intended to promote systems thinking among those who develop, regulate, procure, and use AI applications in healthcare, and to raise awareness of the role of people using or affected by AI.
  17. Content Article
    This article describes SEIPS ((Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety) 101 and seven simple SEIPS tools. The authors discuss how it is intended to make the SEIPS model more useful, particularly for practitioners and those who have not used it before.
  18. Content Article
    In this video, Tim McDonald, Chief Patient Safety and Risk Officer at RLDatix, Paul Bowie, Programme Director (Safety & Improvement) at NHS Education for Scotland, and Helen Hughes, Chief Executive of Patient Safety Learning, talk about the relationship between human factors, high reliability in healthcare and patient safety.
  19. Content Article
    We are delighted to announce that Patient Safety Learning has been recognised amongst the finalists at this year’s Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors (CIEHF) Professional Awards 2021.
  20. Event
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    The purpose of this online event is to demonstrate how human factors as a discipline can help address Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) issues. This webinar will explore the different situations that give rise to EDI issues, including the impact of equipment positioning on wheelchair users, the impact of open plan offices on neurodiverse people, and the impact of user interface language and terminology on people with communication difficulties. It will discuss the implications of these EDI issues, including the impact on the people directly experiencing them, as well as the wider impact on society. It will uncover how human factors can make a difference in addressing these issues, including adopting a systems approach, using a participatory design process and applying specific human factors methods to enhance EDI delivery. Register
  21. Content Article
    Resilient Healthcare is an emerging theoretical field that has developed with influence from engineering, safety science, psychology, ergonomics, human factors, and aeronautics. Resilient Healthcare research has centred on understanding and improving the quality and safety of healthcare delivery. Theory is increasingly well-developed, but so far has only been applied in limited ways with select settings and activities. In order to improve the quality and safety of healthcare, it is essential to first understand the sources of complexity in clinical work. This ethnographic study from Sanford et al. of five hospital teams in a large, teaching hospital in central London aims to contribute to this growing evidence base by presenting data on specific challenges faced by healthcare workers and the adaptations they use to overcome them in everyday clinical work. This paper will present a new framework for recognising misalignments between demand and capacity and corresponding mechanisms for adaptation, which can be used to understand work-as-done in complex settings and to manage risk.
  22. Content Article
    Various research articles have reported that the science of Human Factors is of vital importance in improving human-machine systems. However, what is lacking is a fundamental historical outline of why Human Factors is important. This article from deWinter and Hancock provides such a foundation, using arguments ranging from pre-history to post-COVID.
  23. Event
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    A triennial event featuring over 200 sessions all available on demand plus 800 papers on over 30 themes from healthcare ergonomics, organisational design and management to biomechanics and human modelling and simulation. The Executive Panel will address the Congress theme "HF/E in a Connected World" which raises urgent scientific and professional challenges concerning human interaction with technology in the era of automated and ubiquitous cyber-physical technologies. Register
  24. Event
    Aimed at Clinicians and Managers, this national virtual conference will provide a practical guide to human factors in healthcare, and how a human factors approach can improve patient care, quality, process and safety. Register
  25. Content Article
    As part of the Clinical Human Factors Group (CHFG)'s core mission to promote human factors science in education and training, CHFG have produced a series of E-learning modules for healthcare. These modules seek to encourage the positive actions that create patient safety that are relevant to all staff working in healthcare. We use a human factors and ergonomics perspective to show how human performance and safety are affected by the way we behave, communicate and interact at work. The learning is based around a true story re-created in a new film to show the complexity of how a patient safety incident develops in an everyday scenario. The actors illustrate the subtle behaviours, that we all do some of the time, that give rise to well-documented safety issues, as well as the safety-creating behaviours we want to encourage. The modules reflect items on the NHS England’s Patient Safety Syllabus. 
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