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Found 288 results
  1. Content Article
    The Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) reiterates the importance of clear personal protective equipment (PPE) guidelines to reduce the risk of COVID-19 transmission when delivering care in people’s homes.
  2. Content Article
    The Imperial Simulation Team, led by Dr Malik, filmed this Immersive Simulation of a SARS-CoV2 patient with COVID-19 disease who had a cardiac arrest. Filmed at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust/Imperial College London.
  3. Content Article
    Between 30 June and 5 July 2020, the Royal College of Anaesthetists conducted a survey to assess its members' views on the current preparedness to restart planned services.  The results found that doctors are not confident their hospitals would cope with a second COVID-19 surge and that more anaesthetists are suffering mental distress than ever before as morale drops.
  4. Content Article
    Over 300 health and social care staff died in the UK during the first COVID‐19 wave. There are concerns regarding infection risks but there has been very little discussion or research on personal protective equipment (PPE) design. To understand how PPE changes clinical tasks, Hignett et al. conducted an online survey between (via Twitter, LinkedIn, etc.) 4 April and 8 May 2020, when there was a peak of 33,173 deaths. They focused on human factor/ergonomic issues to avoid preconception bias about availability to ask with regard to fit and comfort, reading and operating equipment, hearing and communicating, reaching and moving, and dexterity to use touch screens, press buttons, open vials/taps and use syringes.
  5. Content Article
    Patients remain the same, but the way that care is organised and delivered around us is changing. We are currently working in a state of flux. In her latest blog, Claire expresses concern around the lack of clarity and standardised updated guidance available for staff, which is leading to different interpretations of the rules and a lack of trust in our leaders, and highlights the impact this is having on staff and patient safety. She is calling for evidenced-based guidance, clarity, better communication and strong leadership to instill trust and the assurance that patient and staff safety is a core priority.
  6. Content Article
    This short blog provides a ‘glimpse of brilliance’ video on donning and doffing of PPE – this includes some reflections on experience of a care home manager in Salford.  This information is sourced from Safer Salford. 
  7. Content Article
    Face coverings have become a flashpoint in the US, particularly now as COVID-19 cases continue to surge in Texas, Florida, and Arizona, among other states. Misinformation and mixed signals about masking have spread almost as quickly as the virus. And political debates pitting civil liberties vs. civic responsibilities have drowned out the growing body of evidence that shows wearing masks significantly reduce infection risk. Sonja Bartolome is a specialist in lung disorders and pulmonary disease, treating respiratory infections every day and has seen firsthand the aggressive nature in which they can spread. She lists the most common myths surrounding masks and separate them from the medical and scientific realities of the current situation.
  8. Content Article
    Due to COVID-19 and the safety issues the pandemic is highlighting, I have decided to write a sequel to my previous blog 'Dropped instrument, washed and immediately reused'. I am writing this because it recently came to my notice from colleagues that safety is once again being compromised in the same private hospital where my shifts were blocked after I reported a patient safety incident.
  9. Content Article
    In this Editorial in Occupational Medicine, Raymond Agius asks why when millions of people are in ‘lockdown’ in their own homes to avoid the contagion of COVID-19, many workers lack a comparable degree of protection. The planning and logistics of contending with this pandemic may be analogous to those of war, but we are not in a conflict: workers’ lives need not and must not be lost. "On the face of it, the conclusion that during this pandemic thousands of workers may have been seriously jeopardized and denied the safeguards that are theirs by right is difficult to refute."
  10. Content Article
    The Government has given the green light for dental practices to reopen in England from 8 June 2020. For a dental practice to treat you, they will need fully compliant Personal Protective Equipment, to exercise social distancing measures and apply appropriate cross-infection control. This means there may be a delay before your dental practice can fully reopen and the range of treatments on offer might be limited.
  11. Content Article
    "Many things will change as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. One of them has to be the safety culture in medicine. Those in positions of authority must stop paying lip service to it and instead treat frontline workers as equal partners in the drive to improve safety, not as expendable infantry who can be bullied over the top with impunity or scapegoated ‘pour encourager les autres'", says Dr David Berger, a remote hospital doctor in Northern Australia. In this blog, David discusses how a robust, modern safety culture involves the closest possible partnership between management and frontline workers, where concerns can be shared freely, cooperation is total and where all interested parties must agree that the best possible system is in place.
  12. Content Article
    The BMA has provided clarification on PPE use in primary and secondary care, including procurement, use, safe working and CPR.
  13. Content Article
    The Royal College of Nursing has undertaken two surveys of health and care staff to identify their experiences and ongoing issues with the supply of and access to personal protective equipment (PPE) during the COVID-19 pandemic. This report details the findings of the second survey (May 2020).
  14. Content Article
    As nurses worldwide feel the pain of prolonged personal protective equipment (PPE) use, we assess the advice on minimising the discomfort caused by masks and visors. Here are some simple tips to prevent skin damage while wearing PPE.
  15. Content Article
    This interview is part of the hub's 'Frontline insights during the pandemic' series where Martin Hogan interviews healthcare professionals from various specialties to capture their experience and insight during the coronavirus pandemic. Here Martin interviews an oral surgeon who has been in the post for a year in a trust that covers two sites in the West Country. 
  16. Content Article
    This interview is part of the hub's 'Frontline insights during the pandemic' series where Martin Hogan interviews healthcare professionals from various specialties to capture their experience and insight during the coronavirus pandemic. Here Martin interviews a chief nurse of clinical productivity leading dynamic change within culture and governance. 15 years in the post, the chief nurse is responsible for leading improvement in standards of nursing and service. 
  17. Content Article
    This interview is part of the hub's 'Frontline insights during the pandemic' series where Martin Hogan interviews healthcare professionals from various specialties to capture their experience and insights during the coronavirus pandemic. Here Martin interviews an advanced specialist paramedic working in central London with four years' experience of working on the frontline. 
  18. Content Article
    For a child, coming in to hospital can be pretty scary at the best of times, but it's especially daunting at the moment with all the doctors and nurses wearing their special personal protective equipment (PPE) for coronavirus. Edinburgh Children's Hospital Charity has created a video that explains, with help of some big and small superheroes, why various outfits – such as an astronaut's helmet or a firefighter's uniform – protect workers from different types of hazards. The idea is to help children in hospital feel more at ease while staff wearing PPE are caring for them.
  19. Content Article
    Trisha Greenhalgh and colleagues argue that it is time to apply the precautionary principle. The precautionary principle is, according to Wikipedia, “a strategy for approaching issues of potential harm when extensive scientific knowledge on the matter is lacking.” The evidence base on the efficacy and acceptability of the different types of face mask in preventing respiratory infections during epidemics is sparse and contested. But COVID-19 is a serious illness that currently has no known treatment or vaccine and is spreading in an immune naive population. Deaths are rising steeply, and health systems are under strain. This raises an ethical question: should policy makers apply the precautionary principle now and encourage people to wear face masks on the grounds that we have little to lose and potentially something to gain from this measure? Greenhalgh and colleagues believe we should. However, there are criticisms of this view. Read the original analysis published in the BMJ and Tricia Greenhalgh's follow up paper in the Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice where she rebutts the criticisms received.
  20. Content Article
    The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has published the first of what will be a regular series of insight documents intended to highlight COVID-19 related pressures on the sectors that CQC regulates.   This document draws on information gathered through direct feedback from staff and people receiving care, regular data collection from services who provide care for people in their own homes, and insight from providers and partners.   The information collected from these sources is being used to understand the wider impact of COVID-19, to share regular updates with local, regional, and national system partners and the Department of Health and Social Care, and to highlight any emerging trends and issues.
  21. Content Article
    The coronavirus pandemic has sparked reports of NHS workers being warned, threatened or disciplined for speaking up about the lack of personal protective equipment (PPE) and testing for coronavirus and similar worries raised in the care sector. It underlines the need for a shift in attitudes in UK workplaces to whistleblowers, underpinned by an overhaul of the law to afford them greater protection, according to Elizabeth Gardiner, the new chief executive of the whistleblowing charity, Protect, in this blog in the Guardian. "We’ve heard direct from some care sector workers who have been threatened with disciplinary aciton if they persist in raising concerns," says Elizabeth. "Whistleblowers are a safety valve – it’s everyone’s business to reveal dangerous working practices." “What we would like to see is a proactive duty on employers to protect whistleblowers from being victimised,” she says. “That would be the sort of cultural shift that we’re looking for.”
  22. Content Article
    This is a webinar recording produced by the International Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua). Patient Safety Learning's Helen Hughes, Patient Advocate Kathy Kovacs Burns, ED Consultant, Rob Galloway and Rachael Grimaldi, the creator of Cardmedic join ISQua to discuss communication between healthcare staff and patinets during COVID-19. This webinar focused on finding solutions to the difficulties that arise in communication between healthcare staff and patients, particularly during events like COVID-19 where the use of face masks and shields create a barrier in communication. We also hear from the perspective of the patient – what are the unintended consequences of failures in communication? Rachael Grimaldi the creator of Cardmedic, shared details of this innovative tool that can be used to aid in the communication between patients and their carers during the pandemic. Communication is an extremely important aspect of care and this webinar aims to help both healthcare staff and patients to find a way through the barriers imposed by COVID-19.
  23. Content Article
    The UK IPC Guidance has been updated. This takes into account the latest assessment of the scientific evidence, and also the feedback from local providers on the ongoing impact on capacity that IPC measures are having.
  24. Content Article
    A poster created by the Royal College of Physicians to help frontline workers understand how to wear personal protective equipment safely.
  25. Content Article
    These resources, set out by NHS England, give guidance for ambulance trusts on the following: assessment and diagnosis management - suspected coronavirus (COVID-19) cases infection Control discharge COVID-19 patient transport services: requirements and funding.
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