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Found 547 results
  1. Content Article
    Continuing Professor Martin Langham's 'Why investigate' blog series, colleague Bobbie Enright turns to the topic of fatigue, looking at the causes and preventions, how it can impact on our work and how we can manage it.
  2. Content Article
    One of the areas where Human Factors is getting more traction is within the healthcare sector. It is still a slow burner though with lots more work to be done, and this is getting more urgent as new technologies are available to make procedures and processes better and potentially support more effective patient outcomes. Dr Mark Sujan has taken this challenge head on by launching the Artificial Intelligence and Digital Health Special Interest Group with the CIEHF. In this podcast, we find out more about Mark and his motivations, as well as what his intentions for the Special Interest Group are.
  3. Content Article
    In this interview for Patient Safety Learning, Josie Gilday, qualified nurse and Global Medical Advisor for Save the Children, tells us more about working in the humanitarian and developmental field, and why she feels so passionately about patient safety.
  4. Content Article
    This book aims to teach the key principles of patient safety to a diverse audience: physicians, nurses, pharmacists, other healthcare providers, quality and safety professionals, risk managers, hospital administrators, and others. It is suitable for all levels of readers: from the senior physician trying to learn this new way of approaching his or her work, to the medical or nursing student, to the risk manager or hospital board member seeking to get more involved in institutional safety efforts. Understanding Patient Safety is divided into three main sections. In Section I, it describes the epidemiology of error, distinguishes safety from quality, discusses the key mental models that inform our modern understanding of the safety field, and summarises the policy environment for patient safety. In Section II, it reviews different error types, taking advantage of real cases to describe various kinds of mistakes and safety hazards, introduces new terminology, and discusses what we know about how errors happen and how they can be prevented. Although many prevention strategies will be touched on in Section II, more general issues regarding various strategies (from both individual institutional and broader policy perspectives) will be reviewed in Section III. After a concluding chapter, the Appendix includes a wide array of resources, from helpful Web sites to a patient safety glossary.
  5. Content Article
    In this blog post, Liv System’s Nigel Scard talks with Courtney Grant, a Senior Human Factors engineer with Transport for London (TfL). Nigel and Courtney worked together for a number of years at TfL on a number of station and line upgrade projects. A few years ago, Courtney applied his Human Factors and research skills with great tenacity, to a serious healthcare related incident which impacted him personally. This resulted in an important, lifesaving change to ambulance service procedures. In this interview, Courtney describes this in detail and also describes his recent work in supporting the Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors (CIEHF) in supporting the response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  6. Content Article
    Human Factors and ergonomics (HFE) expertise continues to have difficulty integrating its experts into healthcare. This persistent disconnect is compounded by unique aspects of healthcare as an institution, industry and work system. Clinically embedded HFE practitioners, a new HFE sub-specialty, are a conduit for addressing substantive mismatches between the two domains. Greater HFE penetration will require a fundamental change in stance for both domains, however, the burden will lie with HFE to be the more adaptive of the two. Learning more about the in situ work of this sub-specialty will provide insights for more nuanced approaches to bridging domain specific mismatches and obstacles.
  7. Content Article
    Help to build an understanding of the diversity of body sizes by taking 10 of your own measurements and recording them online. By providing this data it will enable the Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors (CIEHF) to build up a picture of the diversity of measurements within the population.
  8. Content Article
    In this podcast, produced by Barry Kirby, the President of the Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors (CIEHF), Manda Widdowson talks about the "Design for Everybody" project (listen from 24:55). The project calls on people to help the CIEHF build an understanding of the diversity of body sizes by taking 10 of your own measurements and recording them online. It takes just 5-10 minutes and you can record your measurements anonymously. Follow the link below to listen to the full podcast, available on The murmurings of Barry Kirby website.
  9. Content Article
    In the previous blog in the 'Why investigate' series, we heard from Professor Martin Langham about the error trap being an error trap in itself, and about changing our focus in investigations to look wider than simplistic ideas and models of causation. In this blog, Professor Alex Stedmon considers how we might make the wrong decision when we think it’s the right decision.
  10. Content Article
    More than 30 years have passed since the near-fatal medication error but Michael Villeneuve, CEO Canadian Nursing Association, recalls the moment with absolute clarity.
  11. Content Article
    The Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA) has published its annual overview report of lessons learned from receipt of statutory notifications of accidental and unintended exposures to ionising radiation in 2020. This report provides an overview of the findings from these notifications and shares learnings from the investigations of these incidents.
  12. Content Article
    Working together and maximising the benefits of intelligent technology can have a truly transformative impact on clinical negligence claims, writes Molly Kent, a patient safety specialist at Radar Healthcare, in this HSJ article. Claims essentially arise out of dissatisfaction, usually with a process, service or poor patient journey. Each claim represents an individual’s story – no two cases will be identical, just as no two patients are identical. Molly argues, however, that it’s when we bring the information from claims together that we can truly learn. Rather than looking at each case in its own silo, we should be building the big picture, and considering things like systems of internal control, human factors, communications, audit and education.
  13. Content Article
    Humans have a tendency to think in particular ways that can lead to systematic deviations from making rational judgements. Here's all 188 cognitive biases in existence, grouped by how they impact our thoughts and actions. Produced by DesignHacks.co.
  14. Content Article
    This competency framework has been developed and updated to support prescribers in expanding their knowledge, skills, motives and personal traits, to continually improve their performance, and work safely and effectively.
  15. Content Article
    Ethics in medical science have been borne out of practices that occurred during the second world war, with the Nuremberg code being set up to prevent unethical experimentation on humans from being carried out.  This was further supported by the Declaration of Helsinki that strengthened the protection of participants within medical research by setting out the stipulations that informed consent should be obtained before research. It ensured that data should be kept confidential so that medical research that ultimately requires input from human participants would be able to be carried out with minimal risk to the individual.  Lara Carballo continues the 'Why investigate' blog series with a cautionary tale of why within Human Factors it is necessary to ensure that ethics are in place before embarking on research.
  16. Content Article
    In this short film, Susanna Stanford and Sarah Seddon share a positive message about managing adverse events in healthcare. Drawing together the patient and clinician perspectives, they discuss how clinicians and other healthcare professionals can prepare for the inevitability of things going wrong, and how both patients and clinicians need the same things in the aftermath of adverse events.
  17. Content Article
    In this short film, Susanna Stanford and Sarah Seddon share a positive message about managing adverse events in healthcare. Drawing together the patient and clinician perspectives, they discuss how clinicians and other healthcare professionals can prepare for the inevitability of things going wrong, and how both patients and clinicians need the same things in the aftermath of adverse events.
  18. Content Article
    When a patient can’t breathe by themselves, healthcare staff may decide to intubate them to make it easier to get air into and out of the lungs. A tube goes down the throat and into the windpipe, and a machine called a ventilator pumps in air with extra oxygen. It can be life-saving, but life-threatening complications can also occur during a significant number of these procedures.  Sam Goodhand is a registrar in the Sussex region, specialising in anaesthetics and intensive care medicine. In this interview for Patient Safety Learning he tells us how and why he developed an accessible checklist for staff involved in intubation processes. 
  19. Content Article
    This article, published in Simulation and Gaming proposes a strategy for ensuing simulation training following the implementation of a thorough Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety (TeamSTEPPS®) training initiative. The strategies include observing Teams in the workplace to facilitate the construction of organisation-wide, follow-on simulation training.
  20. Content Article
    This report, produced by The International Association of Oil and Gas Producers (IOGP), aims to ‘demystify’ human factors and help those involved in the investigation process gain confidence by successfully incorporating human factors into investigations.
  21. Content Article
    This list, produced by the Health and Safety Executive, bullet points the job, person and organisation factors that influence human performance.
  22. 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.
  23. Content Article
    In February 2021, the list of never events was updated to exclude wrong tooth extraction, as the systemic barriers to prevent these incidents were not considered ‘strong enough.’ In this article, published in the British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, authors discuss the matter, and provide some recommendations to minimise the risk of wrong tooth extraction.
  24. Content Article
    This article describes the application of colour coding for cognitive aids to facilitate the management of an unanticipated difficult airway and its further local implementation in the form of a colour-coded difficult airway trolley. The authors conclude that the use of colour coding as a cognitive aid can enhance the management of an unanticipated difficult airway and make it simpler to obtain help from other operating room personnel who are not regularly involved in airway management. However, they note that frequent training and simulation with the material and equipment in the difficult airway trolley remains crucial.
  25. 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.
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