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Showing results for tags 'Patient / family support'.
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Content ArticleLearn about anthithrombotics, what they are, the different types and how they work in this short video.
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- Medication
- Competence
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Content Article
Family reference group: INQUEST
Claire Cox posted an article in Patient stories
INQUEST is a charity providing expertise on state related deaths and their investigation to bereaved people, lawyers, advice and support agencies, the media and parliamentarians. Their specialist casework includes deaths in police and prison custody, immigration detention, mental health settings and deaths involving multi-agency failings or where wider issues of state and corporate accountability are in question. What is the Family Reference Group? The INQUEST Family Reference Group is made up of people directly affected by a contentious death (i.e. in detention/custody, where a state body is involved, or where the facts are disputed). It supports and contributes to INQUEST's work from a family perspective. The reference group brings together a range of experiences, taking into consideration race and gender perspectives, types of deaths across custody, immigration detention and mental health care.- Posted
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- Self harm/ suicide
- Patient death
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Content Article
INQUEST: Skills and support toolkit
Claire Cox posted an article in Prison setting
The INQUEST Skills and Support Toolkit is a resource for families and friends dealing with the aftermath of a death in custody and detention. The skills toolkit has been directed by the thoughts and experiences of INQUEST’s family reference group. The group includes a number of families whose relative has died in police custody or following police contact, prison custody, an immigration removal centre and a psychiatric setting.- Posted
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- Mental health
- Prison
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INQUEST Handbook
Claire Cox posted an article in Mental health
The INQUEST handbook is a free and trusted guide for bereaved families and friends affected by a sudden death that involves an inquest, available in print and online. It has been developed and shaped by the many families they work with, and helps prepare bereaved people for the inquest process in England and Wales.- Posted
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- Self harm/ suicide
- Mental health
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Content ArticleEveryday across the NHS, patients, their supporters and the professionals caring for them deal with the aftermath of healthcare harm and, on rare occasions, wrongdoing. Every healthcare system in the world confronts exactly the same problem, but none deal well with the aftermath of harm. In this article published in the Journal of Patient Safety and Risk Management, Anderson-Wallace and Shale introduce a set of standards that aims to make the consequences less devastating for everyone.
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- Patient harmed
- Human error
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Content ArticleThis study, published in the BMJ Open, aims to examine individual, situational and organisational aspects that influence psychological impact and recovery of a patient safety incident on physicians, nurses and midwives.
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- Patient harmed
- Just Culture
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Content ArticleThis paper, published by Science Daily, highlights how a multidisciplinary group of leaders established consensus-driven research agenda designed to create a path forward to inform approaches that better support harmed patients and families.
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- Patient harmed
- Organisational learning
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Content ArticleAt the second annual Patient Safety Learning conference, held on 2 October 2019, we interviewed Evelyn Prodger, Head of Community Services at Martlets Hospice, on her experience at the conference and her thoughts on the launch of the hub.
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- Community care facility
- Care home
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Content Article
The Australian Open Disclosure Framework
PatientSafetyLearning Team posted an article in Processes
The Australian Open Disclosure Framework provides a nationally consistent basis for open disclosure in Australian healthcare. The framework is designed to enable health service organisations and clinicians to communicate openly with patients when healthcare does not go to plan.- Posted
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- Patient / family involvement
- Patient / family support
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Content ArticlePublished in Acta Paediatrica, the parents of a baby who was born prematurely and died, share their experiences of the communication and choices given to them before the birth.
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- Baby
- Obstetrics and gynaecology/ Maternity
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Content ArticleThe nature and consequences of patient and family emotional harm stemming from preventable medical error, such as losing a loved one or surviving serious medical injury, is poorly understood. Patients and families, clinicians, social scientists, lawyers, and foundation/policy leaders were brought together to establish research priorities for this issue. I recommend that all those involved in 'engagement with harmed patients and families' read this and in particular, commit to making sure they are doing the '20 things organisations can do now' that is listed in table 3. This paper was published in the Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. Register for free to view the full article.
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- Patient / family involvement
- Investigation
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Content ArticleAvMA was originally established in 1982 as Action for the Victims of Medical Accidents following public reaction to the television play Minor Complications by AvMA’s founder Peter Ransley. The name was changed in 2003 to Action against Medical Accidents. Since its inception, AvMA has provided advice and support to over 100,000 people affected by medical accidents, and succeeded in bringing about massive changes to the way that the legal system deals with clinical negligence and in moving patient safety higher up the agenda in the UK.
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Content ArticleJo Wailling is a registered nurse and research associate with the Diana Unwin Chair in Restorative Justice, Victoria University of Wellington. Jo presented on restorative practice at the Commission’s mental health and addiction (MHA) quality improvement programme workshop held in Wellington on 26 June for mental health and addiction leaders. This blog is a continuation of that presentation.
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- Investigation
- Patient / family involvement
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Content ArticleExternal Lead Advisor to WHO’s Patients for Patient Safety network, Margaret Murphy, telling the story of her son’s death and how she has used this experience to improve how healthcare organisations work with those who suffer patient harm.
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- Patient engagement
- Patient / family support
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