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Showing results for tags 'Organisational Performance'.
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EventThis one day masterclass is part of a series of masterclasses focusing on how to use Human Factors in your workplace. Leadership in the NHS is the responsibility of all staff. Understanding human factors will allow healthcare to enhance performance, culture and organisation. These masterclasses have been re-designed in line with the new Patient Safety Syllabus. It will look at why things go wrong and how to implement change to prevent it from happening again or mitigate the risks. This masterclass will focus on non-technical skills to improve patient safety. Key learning objectives: Task analysis Cognitive overload Reliability Non-technical skills Examples Register
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- Human factors
- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleThe number of people waiting for NHS treatment in England has risen rapidly during the Covid-19 pandemic, with more than 6.8 million people waiting for treatment in July 2022. Read the Institute for Fiscal Studies' analysis of NHS waiting lists.
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- Long waiting list
- Data
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News Article
New national deadline to eliminate two-year waiters
Patient Safety Learning posted a news article in News
NHS England has issued a new deadline to treat patients who have been waiting more than two years for treatment, a month after saying it had ‘virtually eliminated’ the longest waits, it has emerged. The goal of no-one waiting more than 104 weeks for treatment by July this year was one of the first milestones in the elective recovery plan hammered out between NHSE and ministers. They were not eliminated by the end of July, but the number was reduced to 3,000, having stood at 22,000 in January. The remaining group consisted of nearly 1,600 patients who had been offered faster treatment elsewhere but did not want to travel, 1,000 who required complex treatment and could not be transferred to another provider and 168 who were not treated by the deadline, according to information issued in the summer by NHSE. Now integrated care systems have been told there is a new “national expectation” to treat the remaining, final two-year waiters by the end of September. HSJ was told the goal has been framed as an ambition rather than a target because it includes patients who have chosen to wait longer. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 21 September 2022- Posted
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- Long waiting list
- Patient
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Content ArticleThis worksheet produced by NHS Education for Scotland is designed to be used by healthcare teams as a prompt to highlight the various system-wide factors that contribute to an issue. It aims to help teams understand how these factors relate and interact to produce different outcomes.
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- Communication
- Patient engagement
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News Article
Covid-19: Commission describes “massive global failures” of pandemic response
Patient Safety Learning posted a news article in News
The global response to the first two years of the Covid-19 outbreak failed to control a pandemic that has led to an estimated 17.7 million deaths to date, a major review has concluded. The Lancet Commission on lessons for the future from the Covid-19 pandemic, produced by 28 world leading experts and 100 contributors, cites widespread failures regarding prevention, transparency, rationality, standard public health practice, operational coordination, and global solidarity. It concludes that multilateral cooperation must improve to end the pandemic and manage future global health threats effectively. The commission’s chair, Jeffrey Sachs, who is a professor at Columbia University and president of the Sustainable Development Solutions Network, said, “The staggering human toll of the first two years of the Covid-19 pandemic is a profound tragedy and a massive societal failure at multiple levels.”In its report, which used data from the first two years of the pandemic and new epidemiological and financial analyses, the commission concludes that government responses lacked preparedness, were too slow, paid too little attention to vulnerable groups, and were hampered by misinformation.Read full story Source: BMJ, 14 September 2022- Posted
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- Virus
- Vaccination
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Content ArticleChief Product Officer Mark Fewster speaks with iTS Leadership’s Judy Walker on transforming your understanding through after action reviews. Digressions include paediatric care in the 90s, ‘Six Blind Men and an Elephant’, and learning to trust others.
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- After action review
- Organisational Performance
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Content Article
What is safety management system? (31 August 2022)
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Organisational
Safety Management System (SMS) is a collection of structured, company-wide processes that provide effective risk-based decision-making for daily business functions. A SMS helps organisations offer products or services at the highest level of safety and maintain safe operations. This article explains more.- Posted
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- Safety management
- System safety
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Content ArticleSharing her story in the Guardian, Merope gives a heart breaking account of how her daughter, Martha Mills, was allowed to die, but also what happens when you have blind faith in doctors – and learn too late what you should have known to save your child’s life.
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- Patient death
- Children and Young People
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Content ArticleIn basic terms, a safety management system (SMS) is a formal arrangement for managing, assuring, and improving safety. An SMS is not a single document, it is a framework for managing all risks that arise from running a transport system. It defines roles and responsibilities, sets arrangements for safety mechanisms, involves workers in the process, and ensures continuous improvement. The Railways and Other Guided Transport Systems (Safety) Regulations 2006 (ROGS) introduced the requirement for and content of an SMS. The regulations require most railway operators to maintain an SMS, and hold a safety certificate or authorisation indicating that the SMS has been accepted by the Office of Rail and Road.
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Content ArticleThe Care Quality Commission (CQC) has introduced a new assessment framework that it will use to set out its view of quality and make judgements about health services. The framework is being introduced in phases, and the CQC has published it before it comes into use so that providers and other stakeholders can start to become familiar with it.
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- Assessment and Recommendation
- Feedback
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Content ArticleAs organisations continue to adapt to a faster pace of change and seek to achieve their organisational purpose, it’s essential that the resources and time needed to change are minimised. Improving performance by learning effectively from mistakes is a vital part of the change process but the method of learning employed is critical. In this LinkedIn post, Judy Walker discusses the application of After Action Reviews (AARs).
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- After action review
- Organisational Performance
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Content ArticleThe Medicines and Healthcare product Regulatory Agency’s (MHRA) Annual Report and Accounts for 2021/22 has now been published. It provides an overview of MHRA's performance and the events that have had most impact on the Agency during the past year.
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- Medication
- Medical device / equipment
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Content ArticleThe Professional Standards Authority (PSA) are an independent body, accountable to the UK Parliament. PSA helps to protect the public through their work with organisations that register and regulate people working in health and social care: PSA oversee 10 statutory bodies that regulate health and social care professionals in the UK. PSA accredit registers of health and care professionals held by non-statutory bodies. PSA aim to improve regulation by providing advice to UK government and others, conducting/ commissioning research and promoting the principles of right-touch regulation. Here is a snapshot of the work they have done in 2020/21.
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- Standards
- Regulatory issue
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Content ArticleThe Professional Standards Authority (PSA) performance reviews look at a regulators’ performance against PSA's Standards of Good Regulation, which describe the outcomes regulators are expected to achieve. They cover the key areas of the regulators’ work, together with the more general expectations about the way in which regulators are expected to act. Here is the review of the General Osteopathic Council performance review.
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- Standards
- Regulatory issue
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Content ArticleThe Professional Standards Authority (PSA) performance reviews look at a regulators’ performance against PSA's Standards of Good Regulation, which describe the outcomes regulators are expected to achieve. They cover the key areas of the regulators’ work, together with the more general expectations about the way in which regulators are expected to act. Here is the review of the Health and Care Professions Council performance review.
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- Standards
- Regulatory issue
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Content ArticleThe Regulation and Quality Improvement Authority (RQIA) is the independent body responsible for regulating and inspecting the quality and availability of Health and Social Care services in Northern Ireland. The (RQIA) was commissioned to examine the application and effectiveness of the Procedure for the Reporting and Follow-up of Serious Adverse Incidents in Northern Ireland. The review was conducted by an Expert Review Team established by the RQIA and made five recommendations for implementation.
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- Patient safety incident
- Investigation
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Content ArticleIn this study, Ibrahim et al. evaluated the evidence upon which standards for hospital accreditation by The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (the Joint Commission) are based. They found that in general, recent actionable standards issued by The Joint Commission are seldom supported by high quality data referenced within the issuing documents. The authors suggest that the Joint Commission might consider being more transparent about the quality of evidence and underlying rationale supporting each of its recommendations, including clarifying when and why in certain instances it determines that lower level evidence is sufficient.
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- Standards
- Organisational Performance
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Event
Creating safe systems
Patient Safety Learning posted an event in Community Calendar
This one day masterclass is part of a series of masterclasses focusing on how to use Human Factors in your workplace. Leadership in the NHS is the responsibility of all staff. Understanding human factors will allow healthcare to enhance performance, culture and organisation. These masterclasses have been re-designed in line with the new Patient Safety Syllabus. We will look at why things go wrong and how to implement change to prevent it from happening again or mitigate the risks. This masterclass will focus on risk and behaviour to improve patient safety. Key learning objectives: evaluating risk using mapping techniques safety interventions behaviour assessing safety culture The course is facilitated by Perbinder Grewal, a General & Vascular Surgeon, Human Factors & Patient Safety Trainer, and Emotional Intelligence Practitioner; leads on medical education both locally and nationally; Member of the Faculty of Surgical Trainers at the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh; formerly lead for e-learning for healthcare for the Royal College of Surgeons of England; experienced trainer and coach who uses new insights to develop patient safety, staff engagement and psychological safety; has Postgraduate Certificates in Leadership and Coaching. Register- Posted
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- System safety
- Behaviour
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Event
Patient safety management
Patient Safety Learning posted an event in Community Calendar
This one day masterclass is part of a series of masterclasses focusing on how to use Human Factors in your workplace. Leadership in the NHS is the responsibility of all staff. Understanding human factors will allow healthcare to enhance performance, culture and organisation. These masterclasses have been re-designed in line with the new Patient Safety Syllabus. We will look at why things go wrong and how to implement change to prevent it from happening again or mitigate the risks. This masterclass will focus on non-technical skills to improve patient safety. Key learning objectives: task analysis cognitive overload reliability non-technical skills examples The course is facilitated by Perbinder Grewal, a General & Vascular Surgeon, Human Factors & Patient Safety Trainer, and Emotional Intelligence Practitioner; leads on medical education both locally and nationally; Member of the Faculty of Surgical Trainers at the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh; formerly lead for e-learning for healthcare for the Royal College of Surgeons of England; experienced trainer and coach who uses new insights to develop patient safety, staff engagement and psychological safety; has Postgraduate Certificates in Leadership and Coaching. Register- Posted
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- Human factors
- Training
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Content ArticleClinical engagement has supplemented clinical governance in healthcare to strengthen the contribution of medical professionals to the assessment of clinical outcomes for patients. Assessments of clinical engagement have, until now, been qualitative; this case study in the journal Australian Health Review introduces the concept of quantitative assessment of clinical engagement by measuring the number of patients managed according to specialist society guidelines. Such an assessment engages all staff (medical, nursing, allied health and pharmacy) involved in patients receiving treatment according to such guidelines and provides an assessment of individual and organisational compliance with those guidelines. Clinical engagement is then quantified as the percentage of patients that have been documented to receive specialist society- or college-approved guideline-compliant treatment, relative to the total number who could receive such treatment, in any healthcare organisation.
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- Clinical director
- Care coordination
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News Article
Huge variation in referrals to flagship ‘urgent response’ service
Patient Safety Learning posted a news article in News
Ground breaking new data on community services appears to show enormous variation between areas in the number of referrals for a “two-hour urgent response” being recorded. NHS England has published new provisional data on the performance of urgent community response services against a key NHS long-term plan target of reaching at least 70% of patients referred to them within two hours by December 2022. It is the first time performance data has been published for community health services. It also includes the number of referrals made which are reported as “in scope” of the target, and the total number of service contacts. There is huge variation in both referrals and contacts, not accounted for by the size of areas or population need. The publication of the first national performance data for community services was described as “an important moment for community providers” by Siobhan Melia, chair of the Community Network, which is part of NHS Providers and the NHS Confederation. She added it would “raise the profile of community services, and shine a light on the important work taking place in the sector”. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 21 June 2022- Posted
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- Community care facility
- Organisational Performance
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Event
Systems approach to patient safety
Patient Safety Learning posted an event in Community Calendar
This one day masterclass is part of a series of masterclasses focusing on how to use Human Factors in your workplace. Leadership in the NHS is the responsibility of all staff. Understanding human factors will allow healthcare to enhance performance, culture and organisation. These masterclasses have been re-designed in line with the new Patient Safety Syllabus. It will look at why things go wrong and how to implement change to prevent it from happening again or mitigate the risks. This masterclass will focus on systems to improve patient safety. For further information and to book your place visit https://www.healthcareconferencesuk.co.uk/conferences-masterclasses/systems-approach-patient-safety-masterclass or click on the title above or email kate@hc-uk.org.uk hub members can receive a 20% discount. Email info@pslhub.org for discount code.- Posted
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- Human factors
- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleTeal is the latest colour to enter the business world, and it is shaking things up in a big way. So what are teal organisations, and why should you care? This article will lay out everything you need to know about teal organisations. We will discuss the teal paradigm and how it impacts daily organisational practices. It will also take a look at teal culture and examples of teal organisations.
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- Leadership
- Organisational Performance
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Content ArticleCovid-19 may be receding, but it’s leaving a quiet menace lurking in hospitals in its wake. In a Perspective essay in The New England Journal of Medicine, four senior physicians with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned of a “severe” post-Covid decline in patient safety. The Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology reached a similar conclusion, warning of a rise in “common, often-deadly” infections. To help reverse this troubling trend, the federal physician leaders called for “promoting radical transparency.” In this article, Michael L. Millenson and J. Matthew Austin discuss how adapting the psychological principles of 'Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs' as an organising framework, paired with the principles of information design, can significantly boost both the use and impact of safety and quality information.
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Content ArticleAndrew Morgan joined United Lincolnshire Hospitals in 2019, when the organisation was in double special measures and dealing with the fallout of another critical Care Quality Commission report. His route to the role was slightly unconventional. Already chief executive of Lincolnshire Community Health Services Trust, he was asked to come in to help stabilise the acute trust by Elaine Baylis, who chaired both organisations. He tells HSJ about joining an organisation “where the culture and leadership needed to be looked at”, about what has changed, and about what more remains to be done.
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- Leadership
- Leadership style
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