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Showing results for tags 'Organisational culture'.
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Content ArticleIt can be difficult to turn down requests to cover rota gaps. However, you must balance your own needs against those of the service discusses Emmeline Lagunes-Cordoba, Partha Kar and Tharusha Gunawardena in this BMJ article.
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- Resource allocation
- Resources / Organisational management
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Content Article
Organisational culture and patient safety poster
Hugh Wilkins posted an article in Good practice
Poster presented by hub topic lead, Hugh Wilkins, at the MPEC 2021 Conference.- Posted
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- Organisational culture
- Speaking up
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Content ArticleThis National Guardians Office report analyses the themes and learning from their review of the speaking up culture at Blackpool Teaching Hospitals which was undertaken 2020. The National Guardians Office received information indicating that a speaking up case may not have been handled following good practice. The information received also suggested black and minority ethnic workers had comparatively worse experiences when speaking up. Based on focus groups and interviews with Trust workers, and analysis of internal processes and data, the report reviews information about the trust’s speaking up culture and arrangements and the trust’s support for its workers to speak up.
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- Speaking up
- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleThis guidance was updated on the 30 June 2022 to clarify how healthcare professionals should apply the term “unexpected or unintended” to decide if something qualifies as a notifiable safety event or not. Further detail is included below and you can find the full update here.
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- Duty of Candour
- Investigation
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Content ArticleAppreciative inquiry is a collaborative, strengths-based approach to change in organisations and other human systems. It identifies the positive strengths of an organisation or system and builds on these, rather than focusing on problems that need to be fixed. This article for PositivePsychology.com outlines the history, theory and framework of appreciative inquiry, as well as looking at real-life examples.
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- Feedback
- Collaboration
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Article: Culture, kinship and intelligent kindness (2013)
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Culture
This article by Penny Campling for the Royal College of Psychiatrists suggests that cultivating a culture of 'intelligent kindness' within the NHS will result in more safe and humane care. The author proposes a 'virtuous circle of compassionate care' and highlights systemic barriers that prevent organisations achieving this ideal. She argues that to create this virtuous circle, healthcare professionals need to acknowledge - and consciously work against - structures that undermine kindness. This requires a greater understanding the emotional impact of healthcare work, an acknowledgement that market culture undermines compassionate care and a renewed focus on relationships between professionals.- Posted
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- Skills
- Patient engagement
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Content ArticleResearch shows that peer support is an effective way to help healthcare staff recover when something goes wrong in patient care. The Betsy Lehman Center for Patient Safety has developed a toolkit that aims to help healthcare organisations create or expand peer support opportunities for staff. Each section of the online toolkit focuses on key elements of a successful peer support program - from gaining leadership buy-in to creating policies and collecting data.
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- Staff safety
- USA
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Content ArticleThis article published in Patient Safety discusses the role of patients and families in supporting a culture of safety. It looks at the concept of 'preoccupation with failure', a feature of high reliability organisations (HROs) and examines how patients can contribute to safety by being engaged in this process. The authors discuss a case study in which a patient contributes to safety improvements by sharing specific concerns. They draw out the importance of encouraging and empowering patients and their families to raise issues.
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- Patient engagement
- Quality improvement
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Content ArticleThis article in The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety reports on the findings of a pilot programme to improve healthcare staff wellbeing. Between November 2018 and May 2020, researchers engaged five healthcare sites to take part in a pilot intervention. The pilot used evidence-based approaches to wellbeing including a comprehensive culture assessment, redesigning daily workflow and leadership and team development. The researchers found that healthcare worker wellbeing improved when: an integrated, skills-based approach was taken there was a focus on team culture, interactions and leadership workflows were redesigned to promote positive emotions. This study suggests that combining a number of these approaches at the same time can improve healthcare working environments and reduce levels of staff burnout.
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- Staff support
- Staff safety
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Content ArticlePeople in Place highlights the fundamental skills and people issues which will determine the future of health and care in the UK. The Covid-19 pandemic has made these issues clearer and more pressing, but it has also revealed an appetite for change and resulted in innovative ways of working. This report argues that building effective collective leadership into systems and places is vital to overcome staffing and governance issues in the NHS. Focusing on building long-term frameworks for change rather than responding to immediate pressures, it suggests practical tools and resources that could be used to bring about transformation within the system.
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- Safe staffing
- Diversity
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Content ArticleThis chapter from Patient Safety and Quality: An Evidence-Based Handbook for Nurses describes a framework for understanding how human factors affect patient safety. It illustrates how different cumulative factors result in errors and suggests that nurses have a unique role to play in identifying problems and their causes. The authors highlight staff mindfulness as a tool to transform healthcare organisations into 'highly reliable organisations'.
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- Human factors
- System safety
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Content ArticleThis report by Roger Kline brings together a range of research evidence to suggest practical steps NHS employers can take to reduce inequalities in staff recruitment and career progression. It specifically focuses on the treatment of female, disabled and BAME staff. Written for practitioners, it summarises some of the research evidence on fair recruitment and career progression. It highlights principles drawn from research that underpin the suggestions made for improving each stage of recruitment and career progression.
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- Recruitment
- Staff support
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Content ArticleHealthcare settings are inherently hazardous places, with very unpredictable and complex working environments. These hazards and risks not only result in a range of injuries and ill-health among workers but also jeopardise the safety of patients. The COVID-19 crisis has amplified the importance of ensuring that the healthcare that is provided is safe—for patients and health workers alike. A sufficient, and capable, workforce, is the foundation of resilient systems. Policy makers need to focus now on how to build and support an appropriate workforce to respond to future shocks. This includes health workers beyond the hospital—including those in community, long-term, and primary care. The safety of both patients and health workers should be protected through appropriate mechanisms to ensure the safety of protective equipment and sufficient supplies, appropriate staffing levels, training and support at the workplace. These governance mechanisms are even more relevant when policy makers face trade-offs between health, safety and economic concerns. This is part of series of health working papers from the OECD on the economics of patient safety. The preceding paper, focusing on Long-term care, can be found here.
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- Workforce management
- Staff safety
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Content ArticleIn most cases pregnancy and birth are a positive and safe experience for women and their families. This is the outcome that everyone working in maternity services wants every time, for every woman. But when things go wrong, we need to understand what happened, and whether the outcome could have been different. The death or injury of a new baby or mother is devastating and something that everyone working in the health and care system has a responsibility to do all they can to prevent. Following the publication of ‘Getting safer faster’ the Care Quality Commission (CQC) launched a programme of risk-based, focused maternity safety inspections involving a more focused in-depth assessment of relational elements such as teamworking and culture, staff and patient experience. Building on our previous calls for action, the CQC also sought to further explore the barriers that prevent some services from providing consistently good, safe care and to better understand the disparities in outcomes that exist for women and babies from Black and minority ethnic groups. This report presents the key themes from nine of those inspections alongside insight gathered from direct engagement with organisations representing women using maternity services and their families, including Five X More and local Maternity Voices Partnerships.
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- Maternity
- Patient harmed
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Content ArticleThis paper discusses the use of safety culture assessment as a tool for improving patient safety. It describes the characteristics of culture assessment tools currently available and discusses their current and potential uses, including brief examples from healthcare organisations that have used them. It also highlights critical processes that healthcare organisations need to consider when deciding to use these tools. The authors highlight safety culture assessment as the starting point for patient safety changes. They suggest that safety culture assessment is useful if it: involves key stakeholders uses a suitable safety culture assessment tool uses effective data collection procedures implements action planning and initiates change.
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- Safety culture
- Organisational culture
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Content Article
'Whistleblowing': a definition for reflection in Speak Up Month
Steve Turner posted an article in Whistle blowing
It's that time again. 'Speak Up Month' in the NHS. In this blog, I discuss the definition of 'whistelblowing' and why this is important. I believe that although the Francis Report has stimulated some positive changes, the only way to successfully move forward on this is to celebrate and promote genuine whistleblowers. This includes using the word 'whistleblowing', not a euphemism. It also needs us to involve everyone, including patients, in the changes. "Whistleblowing isn’t a problem to be solved or managed, it’s an opportunity to learn and improve. The more we move away for labelling and stereotyping the more we will learn. Regardless of our position, role or perceived status, we all need to address this much more openly and explicitly, in a spirit of truth and reconciliation." What is whistleblowing? "In the UK, NHS bodies have been guilty of muddying the waters. Sometimes implying that whistleblowers are people who fail to use the proper channels, or are troublemakers, especially when they go outside their organisation with their concerns. In fact, the Public Interest Disclosure Act makes no distinction between ‘internal’ and ‘external’ whistle-blowers..."- Posted
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- Accountability
- Bullying
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Content ArticleThe NHS Staff Survey for England reported that almost a quarter of all NHS staff experienced harassment, bullying or abuse from colleagues in the last 12 months. Not only does this have a devastating impact on individuals and the teams within which they work, but it can have dire consequences for patient care. The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh is committed to eradicating bullying and undermining from the surgical and dental professions. It has a number of resources on its website.
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- Staff safety
- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleIn this video, Helen Hughes, Chief Executive of Patient Safety Learning, speaks to Phil Taylor, Chief Product Officer at RLDatix, about the importance of culture in achieving high reliability in healthcare. They discuss the impact of culture on incident reporting, examples of where safety culture is key to making improvements and consider what is needed to create the right safety culture.
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- Organisational culture
- Patient safety incident
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Content ArticleHospitals across the US are grappling with nurse shortages as the pandemic continues to change the healthcare system as we know it. Two intensive care unit nurses who left their jobs shared their experiences in Becker's Hospital Review.
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Content ArticleThis blog is the introduction to a joint series of blogs and video conversations exploring how we can improve patient safety through the application of principles of high reliability in healthcare, made collaboratively by Patient Safety Learning and RLDatix.
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- Quality improvement
- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleAlthough many initiatives have been implemented and great strides have been achieved in improving patient safety and reducing preventable medical errors, progress towards achieving "zero" avoidable harm continues to be slow. This video presentation will address common medical errors, their recognition, potential for harm and the psychological and financial costs. The concepts of human factors, system design and the high reliability organisation will be reviewed. New approaches in reducing harm and restoring trust will be described along with the opportunity for physician leadership.
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- Human factors
- Human error
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Content ArticleEstablishing a culture of zero harm is critical for organizations that strive to deliver safe, high quality, patient-centered care. This video features insights from leading organisations—Advocate Health Care, Cancer Treatment Centers of America, Boston Children’s Hospital, Novant Health, and MedStar Health—that have embraced a commitment to making safety a core value. Watch now to learn how they overcame the challenges of building a highly reliable safety culture and benefited from making safety and high reliability a top priority within their organisations.
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Content ArticleHundreds of healthcare organisations around the world are Schwartz Center healthcare members and conduct Schwartz Rounds® to bring doctors, nurses and other caregivers together to discuss the social and emotional side of caring for patients and families. This video explains more.
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- Organisational culture
- Leadership
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Content Article
Schwartz Rounds publications
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Research papers
Attached is a list of research papers on Schwartz rounds that you might find useful.- Posted
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- Research
- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleProviding high quality healthcare has an emotional impact on staff. Often they experience high levels of psychological distress, face increasing levels of scrutiny, regulation and demand, and have increasingly limited resources. Schwartz Center Rounds® (Rounds) were developed to support healthcare staff deliver compassionate care by providing a safe space where staff could openly share and reflect on the emotional, social and ethical challenges of their work. Rounds are a monthly staff forum (not attended by patients) where three to four employees (panellists) present short accounts of their experiences of delivering patient care. This organisational guide is based upon the findings from an evaluation of Rounds in the UK, undertaken between 2014 and 2016. The evaluation was commissioned by the National Institute for Health Research and led by Professor Jill Maben at King’s College London (now at the University of Surrey). The evaluation aimed to distil the findings and learning for practical application by organisations seeking to implement and/or sustain Rounds in their organisations.
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- Organisational culture
- Accountability
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