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Found 543 results
  1. Content Article
    This video introduces England's 15 Patient Safety Collaboratives (hosted by Academic Health Science Networks) and how they support the NHS Patient Safety Strategy in areas such as COVID-19, managing deteriorating patients, maternal and neonatal safety, medicines safety, mental health and more. Download the slides here
  2. Content Article
    While the US healthcare system is considered one of the best in the world, many American’s may not realise the potential risks they face when seeking and receiving healthcare. The most recent figures put the rate of preventable healthcare deaths at around 400,000 each year. To put this in perspective, that is more than Alzheimer’s disease, lung cancer, and breast cancer combined kill each year and means that healthcare is the third leading cause of death in the US. That figure does not even reflect the hundreds of thousands of patients who are harmed during their care but do not die. In this article for The Hill, Jill Steiner Sanko explores how we can address preventable healthcare deaths.
  3. Content Article
    On Thursday 18 March, the G20 Health and Development Partnership in collaboration with RLDatix held an Online Panel Discussion for the launch of the International Patient Safety Report: ‘The Overlooked Pandemic – How to Transform Patient Safety and Save Healthcare Systems’.
  4. Content Article
    Presentation at the Safer Healthcare and Biosafety Network meeting highlighting the Safety for All Campaign.
  5. Content Article
    Every year, avoidable harm leads to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of patients, each an unnecessary tragedy. Despite many people doing good work to improve patient safety, this remains a persistent problem. At the recent Future of Hospitals event from Health Plus Care Online, Helen Hughes, Patient Safety Learning's CEO, and Donna Prosser, Chief Clinical Officer of the Patient Safety Movement, consider the need for patient safety to be a core purpose of healthcare and how we can best achieve this. They also discuss whether patient safety can become a social movement - uniting clinicians, patients, leaders, policy-makers and communities.
  6. Content Article
    This report brings together an elected group of experts from across international organisations, G20 Governments, the global health community and civil society to address the challenges that patients and health workers have faced and are currently facing amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. It demonstrates how the safety of patients and health workers is inexorably linked to all global health challenges, including infectious and non-communicable diseases.
  7. Content Article
    In this blog, Patient Safety Learning outlines the key points included in its response to the Care Quality Commission’s (CQC) consultation on their new strategy from 2021, identifying the opportunities this presents for the health and social care regulator to help improve patient safety.
  8. Content Article
    The pandemic has impacted on all aspects of NHS care, with elective and diagnostic activities among those services that have been disrupted. This has led to a considerable backlog of people waiting for NHS treatment.  This briefing, from the NHS Confederation, explores what lies ahead for the health service and patients, based on their modelling of referral-to-treatment waiting trajectories in 2021. It offers an outline policy framework, drawn up by their members, for starting to reduce waiting lists in an effective, equitable and efficient way. 
  9. Content Article
    This progress report outlines the contribution of Academic Health Science Networks (AHSNs) during the first year of the NHS Patient Safety Strategy. It looks at the impact it has had in improving safety in hospitals, maternity and neonatal units, care homes and the community. It also describes how AHSNs and the Patient Safety Collaboratives they host have responded to the COVID-19 pandemic, supporting programmes on tracheostomy safety and the use of pulse oximeters to safely monitor patients at home. Examples featured in the report include tools to spot and manage patients at risk of serious illness in hospitals and care homes, discharge safety bundles, and award-winning projects to support premature babies and their families.
  10. Content Article
    The NHS patient safety strategy was published in 2019. While the principles and high-level objectives of the strategy remain unchanged, NHS England and Improvement recognised the need for some shift in scope. They have updated their tables of deliverables to include the extra work they will be doing, including the new commitment to address patient safety inequalities and to reflect the disruption and uncertainty arising from the pandemic.
  11. Event
    Patient powered safety is about harnessing the power of patient knowledge and their networks to enhance safety of care. It is a platform in making care safe for patients, families, friends, carers, nurses, doctors, researchers, technology companies, health service managers, designers and engineers. The third symposium for Patient powered safety is being held online using an online. Agenda Register
  12. Content Article
    Safety and quality of care for psychiatric patients is a relatively understudied area of patient safety research. This scoping review explores patient safety strategies used in psychiatry. The review identified seven key strategies that rely on staff performance, competence, and compliance: 1) risk management, (2) healthcare practitioners, (3) patient observation, (4) patient involvement, (5) computerised methods, (6) admission and discharge, and (7) security. These strategies primarily target reductions in suicide, self-harm, violence and falls.
  13. Content Article
    This edition to the Institute of Medicine Quality Chasm series discusses the key aspects of the work environment for nurses and reviews the potential improvements in working conditions that are likely to have an impact on patient safety.
  14. Event
    WHO Patient Safety Flagship: A Decade of Patient Safety 2020-2030 is pleased to invite you to the first webinar of Global Patient Safety Webinar Series 2021 introducing the “WHO Patient Safety Incident Reporting and Learning Systems: Technical report and guidance” which was released on 17 September 2020, the World Patient Safety Day. This webinar will present an overview of the technical guidance, and the country experiences on implementing and managing the patient safety incident reporting and learning systems. The Global Patient Safety Network Webinar Series 2021 aim at introducing ongoing activities of WHO Patient Safety Flagship, with the objective of sharing knowledge and experiences on important topics on patient safety. This webinar series is open to everyone who has interest in patient safety. Learning objectives Understand the benefit and challenges in implementing patient safety incident reporting and learning systems. Learn about the WHO technical report and guidance on patient safety incident reporting and learning systems. Consider how to set up patient safety incident reporting and learning systems. Register
  15. Content Article
    The World Health Organization (WHO) has recently published, for consultation, the third draft of its Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021-2030. In this blog, Patient Safety Learning reflects on areas where our initial feedback in September 2019 has been incorporated into the new draft and where we believe the Action Plan can be further strengthened
  16. Content Article
    The government has published a handy factsheet on their amendment to the Medicines and Medical Devices Bill which will create the Patient Safety Commissioner. This was a key recommendation of the Cumberlege Review. 
  17. Content Article
    I would like to share with you my experience of an injury I sustained when working as an agency nurse doing bank shifts in a private hospital and highlight to colleagues the importance of knowing your entitlements when working for an Agency. Please make sure you are adequately covered for injury.
  18. Content Article
    This paper from The Partnership for Health IT Patient Safety examines the need to integrate IT safety into healthcare organisations' safety programs. It aims to create a framework for recognising often-unappreciated technology-related safety issues and highlights both the unintended consequences of using different technologies and the potential to improve safety by incorporating technology.
  19. Content Article
    Regina Hoffman, Executive director of Pennsylvania’s Patient Safety Authority and editor-in-chief of Patient Safety, discusses why we need to shift the focus from "whomever-care" to a "people's care" approach. She hopes after the pandemic that the next chapter brings radical change to how we approach patient safety and says we must start by making patient safety a national priority.  This is part of a series of blogs from Regina 'The bigger picture'.
  20. Event
    On November 29, 1999, the Institute of Medicine released a report called To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System, the report reviewed the status of patient safety in the US and UK, 20 years on and the NHS have released The NHS Patient Safety Strategy. Within the newly developed strategy, the NHS has three strategic aims that will support the development of patient safety culture & a patient safety system. This virtual conference will discuss the 2020, COVID-19 response best practice, along with some national policy insights and international trends. Register
  21. Content Article
    This World Health Organization (WHO) document – Delivering quality health services: a global imperative for universal health coverage – describes the essential role of quality in the delivery of health care services. As nations commit to achieving universal health coverage by 2030, there is a growing acknowledgement that optimal health care cannot be delivered by simply ensuring coexistence of infrastructure, medical supplies and health care providers. Improvement in health care delivery requires a deliberate focus on quality of health services, which involves providing effective, safe, people-centred care that is timely, equitable, integrated and efficient. Quality of care is the degree to which health services for individuals and populations increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes and are consistent with current professional knowledge.
  22. Content Article
    This 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.
  23. Content Article
    Towards the end of December 2020 the Minister for Mental Health, Suicide Prevention and Patient Safety, Nadine Dorries MP, indicated that the Government would be accepting one of the key recommendations made in the First Do No Harm report, published earlier this year by the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review, by creating a Patient Safety Commissioner for England. In this blog, Patient Safety Learning Chief Executive, Helen Hughes, sets out some early thoughts on this proposal and considers what impact it may have on patient safety.
  24. Content Article
    Following Jeremy Hunt’s appointment as chancellor, HSJ is now hosting the Patient Safety Watch newsletter, written by Patient Safety Watch trustee James Titcombe.  Read the latest newsletter: Patient Safety Watch: What can be done to improve duty of candour?
  25. Content Article
    Caitlin Wilson is a Consultant Midwife, currently leading the development and implementation of the Midwifery Continuity of Carer (CoC) model in Worcestershire. In this interview, Caitlin tells us more about the benefits to both staff and families, and offers advice for anyone thinking about adopting this model of care.
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