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Showing results for tags 'Feedback'.
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EventuntilThe Patients Association is running a webinar to support Future Health’s campaign, The Forgotten Majority. This campaign aims to raise awareness among policy representatives from Government and other political parties, as well as other key stakeholders, about the real life every day challenges faced by people with long-term health conditions and advocate for meaningful policy change as we approach the General Election. This webinar will provide patient experience to bring to life policies and initiatives aimed at addressing gaps in care for people with long-term health conditions. We hope this will raise awareness among policymakers and key stakeholders about the challenges faced by the ‘forgotten majority’ and the urgency of addressing their treatment and care. Rachel Power, Chief Executive of the Patients Association, will be chairing this webinar. The panel will share their insights on the importance of addressing the needs of people with long-term health conditions, and will advocate for improved care and support services. Hopefully this will increase awareness and understanding among policymakers and key stakeholders about the challenges faced by individuals with long-term health conditions, and drive systemic change. Register for the webinar
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Content ArticlePublic confidence in the NHS is at an all time low and even when people can access the service, national surveys tell us that their experiences of NHS services are deteriorating. The authors of this blog—Patients Association Trustee Alf Collins and Health Consultant Richard Sloggett—make a simple plea: that all aspects of patient experience is taken seriously. They argue that the care backlogs and levels of unmet need require a radical re-orientation of the relationship between the Government, the health system and the public, and that this needs to involve a complete step-change in how patients are engaged in their care.
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Content ArticleThe Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB) came into operation on 1 October 2023. One of the organisation's key priorities is to develop a new strategy, outlining the long-term goals and themes that underpin its objectives. This consultation is an opportunity to engage and shape HSSIB's strategy and investigation criteria for the future. The organisation is inviting comments and suggestions for improvement from all stakeholders. Comments can be submitted via this online survey. The deadline for submissions to the consultation is 16 May 2024.
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Content ArticleConsumer perspectives enable a broader understanding of how harm occurs. This webpage by Te Tāhū Hauora, the Health Quality & Safety Commission of New Zealand, contains guidance on engaging patients and consumers who have experienced harm and wish to be involved in learning and improvement in the healthcare system. It describes how patients and family will be supported to work in partnership with health care workers.
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- Patient engagement
- New Zealand
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Content ArticleIntegrated Care Boards (ICBs) are responsible for commissioning and funding care provided by the various healthcare providers in its area, such as hospital trusts and community trusts. This blog offers patients practical advice on how to hold their ICB to account, for example, by raising questions at their ICB's monthly or bimonthly meeting.
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Content ArticleThis qualitative study in the Journal of Patient Safety aimed to understand the perception of dental patients who have experienced a dental diagnostic error and to identify patient-centred strategies to help reduce future occurrences. Recruiting patients via social media, the researchers conducted a screening survey, initial assessment and 67 individual patient interviews to capture the effects of misdiagnosis, missed diagnosis or delayed diagnosis on patient lives. They found that dental patients endured prolonged suffering, disease progression, unnecessary treatments and the development of new symptoms as a result of diagnostic errors. Patients believed that the following factors contributed to diagnostic errors: Poor provider communication Inadequate time with provider Lack of patient self-advocacy and health literacy. Patients suggested that future diagnostic errors could be mitigated through: improvements in provider chairside manners more detailed patient diagnostic workups improving personal self-advocacy enhanced reporting systems.
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Content ArticlePublic satisfaction with the NHS has fallen to the lowest level ever recorded, according to analysis of the latest British Social Attitudes survey (BSA) published by The King’s Fund and the Nuffield Trust. Just 24% of people are satisfied with the way the NHS is running, a fall of 5 percentage points from 2022 and a 29 percentage point drop since 2020. Despite these record lows, the overwhelming majority of survey respondents expressed high levels of support for the principles the NHS was founded upon, in particular that it should be free of charge when needed. Nearly half of those surveyed also support the government increasing taxes and spending more on the NHS.
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Content ArticleIn this blog, Patient Safety Partners Anne Rouse and Chris Wardley and Patient Safety Learning’s Chief Executive, Helen Hughes, examine the results of a recent survey of Patient Safety Partners (PSPs). The results reveal significant variation in how the PSP role is being implemented in NHS organisations in England and highlight frustration, barriers and successes that people in the role are experiencing.
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NHS Staff Survey National Results 2023 (7 March 2024)
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Culture
The NHS Staff survey is one of the largest workforce surveys in the world and is carried out every year to improve staff experiences across the NHS. It asks staff in England about their experiences of working for their respective NHS organisations. Of the 1.4 million NHS employees in England, 707,604 staff responded to the survey in 2023.- Posted
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Content ArticleUsing experiences of care from over 10 million people collected over the past ten years, Healthwatch England presents a bold vision for the NHS in 2030. In a new report, Healthwatch outlines what they think the NHS should be in six years and how it can get there. The vision calls for a focus on three key themes: Making the NHS easier to access and navigate. Tackling health inequalities. Building a patient-centred culture.
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Content ArticleThis ethnographic study looked at five local Healthwatch organisations to determine the extent to which they have fulfilled their intended role of fostering co-creation in health and social care in England. The study results demonstrate clear activity and some tangible impacts that have been achieved towards the aim of cocreation. However, the authors also highlight that the positioning of these organisations as 'collaborative insiders' in local governance systems has limited the issues that have been prioritised in co-creative activities. This analysis suggests that the increasing promotion of ideas of co-production in English health and social care has resulted in fertile grounds for localised co-creation. However, the authors highlight that the areas Healthwatch focused on were ones where other agencies in the system recognised their limitations, and where they knew they needed help to avoid socially undesirable outcomes. As a result, the approaches taken to co-creation by Healthwatch were largely conservative and constrained. The authors state that, "Even though they were not explicitly ruled out-of-bounds, Healthwatch officers knew that to be considered legitimate and serious players in the governance of health and social care, they needed to be selective about which issues they brought to the table."
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To coach or not to coach? Part 3 – by Dawn Stott
Dawn Stott posted an article in Good practice
In a new series of blogs, Dawn Stott, Business Consultant and former CEO of the Association for Perioperative Practice (AfPP), discusses how coaching and developing teams can support patient safety and its outcomes. In part one and part two, Dawn looked at the strategies and coaching methodologies that can be used to develop individuals and to support patient safety, and discusses the indicators of improvement, prosocial behaviours and the importance of good communication to improve culture and, ultimately, patient safety. In the final blog of the series, Dawn discusses the importance of reflective practice and how it encourages learning and growth, and helps us to identify and address challenges.- Posted
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Content Article
To coach or not to coach? Part 2 – by Dawn Stott
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Good practice
In a new series of blogs, Dawn Stott, Business Consultant and former CEO of the Association for Perioperative Practice (AfPP), discusses how coaching and developing teams can support patient safety and its outcomes. In part one, Dawn looked at the strategies and coaching methodologies that can be used to develop individuals and to support patient safety. In part two, Dawn looks at how coaching can improve individuals, and discusses the indicators of improvement, prosocial behaviours and the importance of good communication to improve culture and, ultimately, patient safety.- Posted
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- Health coaching
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Content ArticleParticipants are vital to the success of any clinical trial. Without the data they provide, our research system would collapse. But being a clinical trial participant is not easy. Financial barriers, transport challenges, and a lack of engagement and support can leave patients feeling marginalised and disconnected. This article looks at what needs to be done to ensure diverse patients from around the world can engage with studies and remain engaged from screening until study completion, regardless of their personal circumstances.
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Content ArticleThis article looks at the judgements made by experts in the cases that are not covered by rules, focusing on the key role of stories and storytelling. Drawing on literature related to high-reliability theory, organisational learning and naturalistic decision-making, it examines how experts working in diverse critical contexts use stories to share and make sense of their experiences.
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Content Article
To coach or not to coach? Part 1 – by Dawn Stott
Dawn Stott posted an article in Good practice
In a new series of blogs for the hub, Dawn Stott, Business Consultant and former CEO of the Association for Perioperative Practice (AfPP), discusses how coaching and developing teams can support patient safety and its outcomes. In part one, Dawn looks at strategies and coaching methodologies that can be used to develop individuals to be the best they can be. We all develop at different rates; having an external view point that supports your progress is something to grab with both hands. It is not about about how good you are right now; it is about how good you can be.- Posted
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- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleThis training tracker from the Patient Experience Library helps you find courses on patient experience and patient/public involvement hosted by a range of external organisations. Each listing contains details on how to book places and contact the course providers.
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Content ArticleAs part of the Lancet's Child and Adolescent Health Spotlight, the journal called for young people around the world aged 18–25 years to lend their perspectives and lived experiences on the two key spotlight asks: That children must be immediately prioritised in health and social policies; children and young people deserve attention in their own right, and not only because they are an indispensable foundation for a sustainable future. That governments and health providers should prioritise health equity for children and young people, within and between countries. The Lancet received 104 submissions in Chinese, English, Portuguese and Spanish, many of which have been published as essays in Lancet publications. This article in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health summarises the key themes that were raised in the submissions received, including: the need for honest conversations with trusted adults about less talked-about areas including sex and death. the mental health impacts of attacks on transgender young people. the issues associated with living with a chronic illness as a young person. the importance of non-tokenistic youth engagement in research.
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- Children and Young People
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EventThis conference will focus on measuring, understanding and acting on patient experience insight, and demonstrating responsiveness to that insight to ensure patient feedback is translated into quality improvement and assurance. Through national updates and case study presentations the conference will support you to measure, monitor and improve patient experience in your service, and ensure that insight leads to quality improvement. Sessions will include learning from patients, improving patient experience, practical sessions focusing on delivering a patient experience based culture, measuring patient experience, demonstrating insight and responsiveness in real time, monitoring and improving staff experience, the role of human factors in improving quality, using patient experience to drive improvement, changing the way we think about patient experience, and learning from excellence in patient experience practice. For further information and to book your place visit https://www.healthcareconferencesuk.co.uk/virtual-online-courses/patient-experience-insight or email frida@hc-uk.org.uk Follow on Twitter @HCUK_Clare #PatientExp hub members receive a 20% discount. Email info@pslhub.org for the discount code.
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Content ArticleThe Patients Association has been working with NHS England and the Royal College of Physicians on the development of an outpatient strategy for the past year. In this series of three blogs, they discuss what they have heard from patients about the state of outpatient care and what patients would like to see change. What patients want from an outpatient strategy Kindness, reasonable adjustments and consistency needed across outpatients Personalising care and offering patients choice
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Content ArticlePatient experience is deteriorating across the NHS, so hearing from users should be of the utmost importance as the NHS looks to improve, yet too often those leading work on patient experience feel that it is not prioritised. The King’s Fund has been working with the Heads of Patient Experience (HOPE) network to design and develop projects to better understand how people and communities are experiencing health and care services. This article outlines learning and recommendations from this work.
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Content ArticleThe story behind Martha’s rule is depressingly familiar. A parent raising significant concerns about their daughter’s ongoing care only to be ignored with tragic consequences. Unfortunately, this feels like the latest in a long line of incidents where the NHS has failed to heed warnings from patients and their families about the quality of their care. This article by Dan Wellings looks at recent collaborative work by The King's Fund and the Heads of Patient Experience (HOPE) network to understand why the NHS is still too often not listening to people who use its services. He highlights that progress made since the early 2000s in improving how the health service listens to patients has stalled, with the proportion of patients feeling involved in decisions about their care or treatment falling in recent years. He also outlines how organisational cultures that focus disproportionately on the positive miss opportunities to hear and respond to stories that demonstrate serious patient safety and experience issues.
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Content ArticleThis report documents a meeting held in September 2022 that explored how Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS®) surveys shed light on disparities in patient experience and how improved measurement can advance healthcare equity in the US. Over 600 CAHPS survey users, researchers, healthcare organisation leaders, patient advocates, policymakers, Federal partners and the CAHPS Consortium attended.
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- Health inequalities
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Content ArticleIn this blog, Professor of Medical Education Kate Owen explains how her team has embedded a session on patient safety in the final year curriculum at Warwick Medical School. Using a real-life story posted on the Care Opinion website, the session gives medical students an opportunity to use investigation tools, understand NHS reporting systems and consider the importance of compassionate communication with harmed patients and their families.