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Found 552 results
  1. Content Article
    NHS England has collated this set of resources about understanding complexity. Understanding complexity video by NHS Horizons Understanding and Working with Complexity blog by Andrew Singfield Spread and Complexity in the NHS blog by Diane Ketley Looking at Spread – Three Helpful Lenses blog by Diane Ketley Spreading and scaling up innovation and improvement paper by Trisha Greenhalgh Changing how we think about healthcare improvement paper and audio recording by Jeremy Braithwaite ‘Adaptive Spaces’ for an emerging future blog by Q community What is Adaptive space? A Brief Introduction video by Gareth Evans Adaptive Space in Action video by Matthew Mezey Adaptive space – Overview of the work of Mary Uhl-Bien video by Diane Ketley How ‘Adaptive Spaces’ enable innovation in healthcare and beyond webinar with Mary Uhl-Bien How to master the art of creating ‘Adaptive Spaces webinar with Mary Uhl-Bien Mary Uhl-Bien in Conversation: COVID-19, complexity leadership and spread of innovation video recording with Mary Uhl-Bien Adaptive spaces, networks…. and a challenge called spread blog by Diane Ketley Complexity leadership theory: Shifting from Human Capital to Social Capital paper by M Arena and Mary Uhl-Bien How to Catalyse Innovation in Your Organisation paper by M Arena et al Navigate Complexity: Three Habits of Mind blog by Sonja Blignaut Three habits of mind video by Jennifer Garvey Berger and Keith Johnston Cynefin framework introduction video and book chapter by Jennifer Garvey Berger and D Snowden Stacey framework blog and video recording by R Stacey
  2. Content Article
    ECRI is an independent non-profit that produces an annual list of Top 10 Patient Safety Concerns, and its list for 2023 includes a new emphasis on system safety. In this interview for the Betsy Lehman Center, two leaders at ECRI talk about the list and the current state of patient safety. Shannon Davila, ECRI’s Director of Total Systems Safety and Marcus Schabacker, President and CEO, discuss the need to address gaps in performance with a "total systems approach," the ongoing issue of health inequity and the patient safety risks associated with recent changes in state laws and guidance around obstetrics and maternity.
  3. Content Article
    In this blog, hub topic lead Julie Storr talks about her new book Infection prevention and control: A social science perspective, which explores new perspectives on and approaches to infection prevention and control (IPC). The book examines how people and their behaviour affect IPC, and how they are in turn affected by IPC measures. Julie highlights the importance of compassion in IPC policy and implementation and outlines the unintended negative consequences that IPC measures can have. Among other contributors, Patient Safety Learning's Chief Executive Helen Hughes has written a chapter for the book highlighting the need for patient safety to be treated as a core purpose of health and social care.
  4. Content Article
    Does your manufacturing facility experience an undesirable frequency of costly product losses? Are recurring operational issues impacting productivity and morale? Do people believe the causes of these production issues are ‘human error’? Do Quality Differently will show you: How to take a systems-based risk management approach to create more operational success. Practical examples to guide improvement in your operations. Ways to apply comprehensive approaches that reveal and address the combination of factors that influence performance outcomes.
  5. Content Article
    Ensuring organisations learn from patient safety incidents is a key aim for healthcare organisations. The role that human factors and systems thinking can have to enable organisations learn from incidents is well acknowledged. A systems approach can help organisations focus less on individual fallibility and more on setting up resilient and safe systems. Investigation of incidents has previously been rooted in reductionist methodologies, for example, seeking to find the ‘root cause’ to individual incidents. While healthcare has embraced, in some contexts, the option for system-based methodologies—for example, SEIPS and Accimaps—these methodologies and frameworks still operate from a single incident perspective. It has long been acknowledged that healthcare organisations should focus on near misses and low harms with the same emphasis as incidents resulting in high harm. However, logistically, investigating all incidents in the same way is difficult.
  6. Content Article
    This blog by Operations Insider looks at the Gemba Walk approach to problem solving in systems. Gemba Walks involve looking at problems where they occur and discussing them on site, in the real world. The blog includes a series of questions to consider when using the Gemba Walk approach,
  7. Content Article
    This blog describes the Gemba Walk technique, a popular LEAN management method. During a Gemba Walk, leaders gain valuable insight into the flow of value within the organisation by visiting the workplace and interacting with employees. Leaders also learn new ways to support their employees. The approach encourages collaboration between employees and the leaders. The article covers: What is a Gemba Walk? Three important components of the Gemba Walk Gemba Walk planning, execution and follow-up Get the team ready Develop a plan Follow the Value Stream Never lose sight that the process as a problem (not the people) Keep a record of your observations Ask questions Do not suggest changes during the walk Participate in teams Who should go on a Gemba Walk? Follow up with employees Return to the Gemba An example Gemba Walk Checklist
  8. Content Article
    To overcome the problem of development teams losing sight of the detail of processes they are trying to improve, Toyota developed what they call a 'Gemba Walk'. The translation of the term from the root Japanese word is 'the real place' or 'the place where value is created'. This article describes how a Gemba Walk works, how it has been adapted for different industries and the value of engaging both leaders and employees in the process.
  9. Content Article
    The term 'Gemba Walk' is derived from the Japanese word 'Gemba' or 'Gembutsu' which means 'the real place', so it can be literally defined as the act of seeing where the actual work happens. A safety Gemba Walk, or Gemba safety walk, is a safety walk integrated with the Gemba method, emphasising the continuous improvement of safety by watching the actions required to complete daily tasks and determine ways to make work safer. While a typical site safety walk through aims to maintain compliance with safety standards, a safety Gemba Walk focuses on looking for opportunities to continuously improve workplace safety. This article describes the Gemba Walk method and includes information on: What is a Safety Gemba Walk? What is a Virtual Gemba Walk? Why are Gemba Walks important? Benefits How to do a Gemba Walk Process How often should you do a Gemba Walk? Effective ways to do a Gemba Walk Examples
  10. Content Article
    On paper, a GP’s working schedule can look quite inviting: consulting for three and a half hours in the morning, with a coffee break in the middle, then a gap for lunch and home visits before a similar length afternoon surgery. However, this is rarely the reality for NHS GPs. In this BMJ opinion piece, GP Helen Salisbury talks about what working life is really like for GPs and highlights the mismatch between their scheduled hours and tasks and the reality, which often involves them doing much more. She highlights how the unrealistic demands GPs face have been exacerbated by a movement of work from secondary to primary care, and argues that this is contributing to the workforce crisis that general practice faces.
  11. Content Article
    The Academy of Medical Royal Colleges and the University of Warwick have developed this NHS Patient Safety syllabus to complement it as the basis for education and training for staff throughout the NHS.
  12. Content Article
     The discipline of ergonomics, or human factors engineering, has made substantial contributions to both the development of a science of safety, and to the improvement of safety in a wide variety of hazardous industries, including nuclear power, aviation, shipping, energy extraction and refining, military operations, and finance. It is notable that healthcare, which in most advanced societies is a substantial sector of the economy and has been associated with large volumes of potentially preventable morbidity and mortality, has not up to now been viewed as a safety critical industry. This paper from Robert L Wears proposes that improving safety performance in healthcare must involve a re-envisioning of healthcare itself as a safety-critical industry, but one with considerable differences from most engineered safety-critical systems. This has implications both for healthcare, and for conceptions of safety-critical industries. 
  13. Content Article
    Breaks from operational duty are an important factor in the management of fatigue. But as highly committed and professional operational staff often perform several secondary tasks and activities—inside or outside the ops room—breaks can become a victim. This blog by Chartered Ergonomist and Human Factors Specialist Stephen Shorrock offers some general guidelines about what kinds of tasks add to stress and fatigue and should be avoided during rest breaks. He places break activities into three categories which place different demands on the individual: red, amber and green activities. He also highlights that when it comes to breaks from operational duty, changes in activity are the key to reducing fatigue-related risks.
  14. Content Article
    In this blog, interdisciplinary humanistic, systems and design practitioner Dr Stephen Shorrock explores the dangers of project leaders relying on assumptions about work-as-imagined, detached from the reality of contextualised work-as-done. He describes his experience working on a project in which he discovered that operational staff felt anxious and unprepared for the major changes to come. This was unacknowledged by management, and he ascribes their lack of awareness to a failure to physically and empathetically engage with the workers in the reality of the processes and systems management had designed. He highlights the importance of empathy and asks the question, "In your worlds, how connected are managers and other non-operational specialists with operational staff and the operational environment, where changes ultimately end up? Those who wish to support operational staff through change must take the role of pupil, or apprentice – not master."
  15. Content Article
    Medical equipment, supplies, and devices (ESD) serve a critical function in healthcare delivery and how they function can have an impact on patient safety. ESD-related safety issues include malfunctions, physically missing ESDs, sterilisation and usability. Describing ESD-related safety issues from a human factors perspective that focuses on user interactions with ESDs can provide additional insights to address these issues. This article in the journal Patient Safety reviewed ESD patient safety event reports submitted to the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Reporting System to identify ESD-related safety issues.
  16. Content Article
     Failure to rescue is defined as mortality after complications during hospital care. Incidence ranges 10.9%–13.3% and several national reports such as National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcomes and Death and National Institute of Clinical Excellence CG 50 highlight failure to rescue as a significant problem for safe patient care. To avoid failure to rescue events, there must be successful escalation of care. Studies indicate that human factors such as situational awareness, team working, communication and a culture promoting safety contribute to avoidance of failure to rescue events. Understanding human factors is essential to developing work systems that mitigate barriers and facilitate prompt escalation of care. This qualitative evidence synthesis identifies and synthesise what is known about the human factors that affect escalation of care.
  17. Content Article
    Alarms are signals intended to capture and direct human attention to a potential issue that may require monitoring, assessment or intervention. They play a critical safety role in high-risk industries such as healthcare, which relies heavily on auditory and visual alarms. While there are some guidelines to inform alarm design and use, alarm fatigue and other alarm issues are challenges in the healthcare setting. The automotive, aviation, and nuclear industries have used the science of human factors to develop alarm design and use guidelines. This study in the journal Patient Safety aimed to assess whether these guidelines may provide insights for advancing patient safety in healthcare.
  18. Gallery Image
    Shared with hub by Dr Abigail Clark-Morgan: Images shared of our stocked noradrenaline ampules and tranexamic acid – these have been mixed up and we are looking to stock alternative volumes of noradrenaline to reduce the likelihood of confusion. The incident also highlighted the importance of checking all the ampules drawn up, drawing up your own medications at the point of administration and effective second checking. Part of our immediate response was to label the noradrenaline ampules to make them more obviously different (the purple ampules pictured below).

    © Healthcare UK

  19. Gallery Image
    Bupivacaine solution, a medication used to decrease feeling in a specific area, alongside sodium chloride used as a saline solution. What could go wrong?! Another example of almost identical packaging/labelling.
  20. Gallery Image
    Similar looking boxes, but different drugs, stored together on the shelf. Easy to pick the wrong one up.
  21. Gallery Image
    Do we need a magnifying glass in every anaesthetic room? Only a matter of time until something bad happens...
  22. Gallery Image
    Can you read this glyco ampoule? Very small writing on the label - difficult to read, especially when in a hurry.
  23. Gallery Image
    These two solutions look very similar. One is paracetamol, the other Sodium Chloride. Example of packaging/labelling contributing to adverse events.
  24. Gallery Image
    Why would manufacturers make labelling for rocuronium orange? This is something you wouldn't want to muddle up.
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