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Found 543 results
  1. Content Article
    The NHS Confederation, NHS Providers, the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, National Voices and the Richmond Group of Charities have penned a joint letter to the new Prime Minister warning that without urgent action on key priorities the NHS risks being trapped in a relentless cycle unable to meet rising patient need and demand. The five organisations, which together represent NHS leaders, clinicians and patients, are calling on the new government to take rapid action to address five key priorities in the short term.  These priorities are: Workforce Social care Capital funding  The impact of the cost of living crisis and inflation Strengthening the voice of people living with ill health in decision making.
  2. Content Article
    On 22 February 2001, eighteen-month-old Josie King died from medical errors. More than 250,000 people die every year from medical errors, making it the third leading cause of death in the United States. The Josie King Foundation’s mission is to prevent patients from dying or being harmed by medical errors. By uniting healthcare providers and consumers, and funding innovative safety programs, we hope to create a culture of patient safety, together.
  3. Content Article
    This article in the journal Implementation Science aims to offer a system for classifying implementation strategies. The article recommends that authors not only name and define their implementation strategies, but also specify who enacted the strategy, and the level and determinants that were targeted.
  4. Content Article
    Wessex LMCs podcasts share good ideas, challenge your thoughts and introduce you to interesting people and projects all to support you in your work in general practice.
  5. Event
    until
    150 high-level participants spanning across G20+ countries will discuss with G20 policymakers and politicians, government ministers, multilateral organisations, the global health community, the private sector, economists, civil society, and academia how to create a new age of partnerships and positive sustainable interdependencies of the many global and national COVID-19 learning initiatives. Participants will discuss and suggest how to advance the nexus of health and socio-economic impact to not only avoid a future pandemic, but transform health systems for good. The H20 Summit will make joint recommendations to the upcoming G20 Health Ministers and Leaders Meeting in October and November 2022. Register
  6. Content Article
    The NHS is in trouble today due to an utter failure of leadership in response to the challenge of increasing demand, writes Dr John Carlisle. The Health and Social Care Act was the most extensive reorganisation of the NHS ever. The plan emerged in 2010 when Health Secretary Andrew Lansley began to prepare the new bill, just as the NHS public satisfaction with the NHS was at its highest ever in a polling series that ran back to 1983. Now, ask yourselves, what fool would interfere with any organisation that had such ‘consumer confidence’? Never has the phrase, ‘if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it’ been more apt, particularly for an organisation that employs over a million staff and whose work is critical, and is respected around the world. But Lansley, ignoring international experts like Dr Don Berwick, pushed his own theory (which is all it was) into practice and created the conditions for Jeremy Hunt and his Oxford chum, Simon Stevens, to run the organisation down. Needless to say, the act worked out badly for the poor NHS. By 2018 public satisfaction had dropped to its lowest in 11 years as Hunt and Stevens tried to cobble together the ‘new’ NHS. Just how did this happen?
  7. Event
    until
    The International Alliance of Patients’ Organizations (IAPO) and Patient Academy for Innovation and Research (PAIR Academy) in partnership with Dakshama Health are launching a series of webinars to introduce the Strategic Framework of the Global Patient Safety Challenge - Medication Without Harm. The theme of the 5th webinar of the medication without harm webinar series is "Medication safety in high-risk situations”. This webinar will emphasise how to address high-risk situations and reduce the risk of medication-related harm, within WHO’s Global Patient Safety Challenge: Medication Without Harm, to improve medication safety. The patient safety series of webinars will focus on the strategic framework of the Global Patient Safety Challenge, which depicts the four domains of the challenge: patients and the public, health care professionals, medicine, and systems and practices of medication, and the three key action areas—namely polypharmacy, high-risk situations, and transitions of care, The series of webinars will share challenges, technical strategies, tools, and patient experiences in implementing the Strategic Framework of the Global Patient Safety Challenge to reduce medication-related harm. Register #medicationwithoutharm #medicationsafety #medications #patientafety #safemeds
  8. Content Article
    Patient Safety is a healthcare discipline that aims to prevent and reduce risks, errors, and harm that occur to patients during the provision of health care. As per WHO, millions of patients are harmed every year due to unsafe medication practices, 2.6 million deaths annually in low-and middle-income countries alone. Today, patient harm due to unsafe care is a large and growing global public health concern and is one of the leading causes of death and disability worldwide. Most of this patient harm is avoidable. The Asia Pacific Patient Safety Network's mission is to advocate for patient safety, where everyone receives safe and high-quality medical care while reducing unavoidable harm due to unsafe care across the globe.
  9. Content Article
    In this blog, Patient Safety Learning reflects on a recent letter by Keith Conradi to the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, highlighting concerns about a lack of interest and attention in the activities of the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) at the highest levels of the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) and NHS England.
  10. Content Article
    This consensus statement is founded on the policies articulated in numerous global and regional resolutions and decisions on patient safety adopted by governing bodies of the World Health Organization (WHO) and other international organisations. It is based on the proceedings of the WHO Policy Makers’ Forum, highlighting the central and specific role of policy-makers and healthcare leaders in implementation of the Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021–2030 at all levels in all countries. Approximately 310 participants from around 90 countries across the world – including senior policy-makers, healthcare leaders, patient safety experts at national, subnational, regional, organisational and healthcare facility levels, patient safety advocates, and representatives of key international organisations – met (virtually) on 23–24 February 2022 to participate in the Policy Makers’ Forum organised by the Patient Safety Flagship unit, WHO headquarters, Geneva, Switzerland.
  11. Content Article
    Hear from Amanda Hutchinson, Head of Policy for Regulatory Change and Lisa Annaly, Head of Analytic Content here at CQC, as they take you through the Care Quality Commission's (CQC) new regulatory approach. This video covers: CQC's assessment framework. CQC's assessment approach. What a 'year in the life' of a provider will look like under our new regulatory approach. Feedback from a recent engagement session CQC held with over 100 health and social care providers and professionals. Ways you can stay up to date with the changes CQC is making.
  12. News Article
    The Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay has today appointed Dr Henrietta Hughes OBE as the first ever Patient Safety Commissioner for England. Adding to and enhancing existing work to improve the safety of medicines and medical devices, the appointment of a Commissioner is in response to the recommendations from Baroness Cumberlege’s review into patient safety, published in 2020. Dr Hughes will be an independent point of contact for patients, giving a voice to their concerns to make sure they are heard. She will help the NHS and government better understand what they can do to put patients first, promote the safety of patients, and the importance of the views of patients and other members of the public. Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said: "It is essential that we put patient safety first and continue to listen to and champion patients’ voices. Dr Henrietta Hughes brings a wealth of experience with her as the first ever Patient Safety Commissioner to improve the safety of medicines and medical devices and her work will help support NHS staff as we work hard to beat the Covid backlogs." Patient Safety Commissioner Henrietta Hughes said: "I am humbled and honoured to be appointed as the first Patient Safety Commissioner. This vital role, recommended in First Do No Harm, will make a difference to the safety of patients in relation to medicines and medical devices. Patients’ voices need to be at the heart of the design and delivery of healthcare. I would like to pay tribute to the incredible courage, persistence and compassion of all those who gave evidence to the report, their families and everyone who continues to campaign tirelessly for safer treatments. I will work collaboratively with patients, the healthcare system and others so that all patients receive the information they need, all patients’ voices are heard and the system responds quickly to keep people safe." Read full story Source: Gov.UK, 12 July 2022
  13. News Article
    A world-famous hospital has a culture where some staff may put research interests above patient safety, according to an external investigation. A report published yesterday cited some employees at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children Foundation Trust as saying “they feel that the hospital sometimes put too much emphasis on pushing the boundaries of science” and “are concerned [this] may lead to a culture where some prioritise innovation over safety in their practice”. The trust’s medical director Sanjiv Sharma commissioned the report into the effectiveness of its safety procedures, from consultancy Verita, in 2020, after families of several patients who died at the hospital raised concerns in the media about how it responded to safety incidents. The report said: “We believe that it is sometimes culturally difficult within Great Ormond Street to accept that things can go wrong and to respond appropriately. We were told that some see the organisation as ‘bullet-proof’ in the face of criticism." “There is also a view outside the trust that some clinicians at Great Ormond Street can find it difficult to accept that something had gone wrong. Some believe that this reflex is deeply ingrained. This is potentially indicative of a culture of defensiveness. Acknowledging this trait is the first step on the road to changing it.” Dr Sharma said in a statement yesterday that GOSH had already taken steps to improve its culture and systems, appointing patient safety educators and patient safety leads in each directorate. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 7 July 2022
  14. Content Article
    This is the report of the Health and Social Care Select Committee endorsing the appointment of Dr Henrietta Hughes as the first Patient Safety Commissioner for England. The publication of this report follows a formal meeting (oral evidence session) of the Committee which took place Tuesday 5 July 2022.
  15. Content Article
    In this editorial, published in the British Journal of Hospital Medicine, Dr Paul Grime reviews the report 'Mind the implementation Gap: The persistence of avoidable harm in the NHS', which calls on the government, parliamentarians and NHS leads to take action to address the underlying causes of avoidable harm in healthcare.
  16. Content Article
    Tracey Cammish, Patient safety, Clinical Intelligence and Partnership Lead, explains why patient safety is central to everything NHS Supply Chain does, and why clinical and end-user experience is so important.
  17. Event
    In its 15th year, the HSJ Patient Safety Congress is the largest annual event to unite patient safety leaders, front-line innovators, national policymakers and patient representatives from across the UK to learn and exchange ideas that will transform patient safety and standards of care. Patient safety is a field that never stands still. Practitioners across the patient pathway are dedicated to continuous improvement and improving the patient experience, ensuring equity of care for all and optimising outcomes. As a result of this Congress, changes have been made to medical textbooks and led to new research being commissioned. But more importantly, it is through this event that changes are made within teams and organisations that help save lives. This year’s Congress will address both new and long-standing patient safety challenges, offering new insights, practical ideas and actionable solutions to help improve care in your organisation: Building a restorative culture. Integrating human factors approach to improve safety. Focusing on patient safety in non-acute settings. Practical approaches to patient and family engagement. Safety and equality in women’s health. Protecting and supporting our workforce. Improving governance and regulation to achieve consistent care. Encouraging clinician-led innovation. Examining safety for vulnerable people. Recognising and responding to the deteriorating patient. Breaking the cycle of repeat errors to advance the safety agenda. Responding to catastrophe in a healthcare setting. Reversing the impact of normalised deviance on patient safety. Eliminating unnecessary deaths in a post-pandemic. Register
  18. News Article
    The outgoing chief investigator of the national safety watchdog has described his frustration with the organisation’s ‘ambivalent’ relationship with NHS England. Keith Conradi, who is due to retire from the Health Safety Investigation Branch in July, said he did not think he had “ever really spoken to any of the hierarchy in NHS England”. He added “their priorities are elsewhere”. In an interview with health commentator Roy Lilley for the Institute for Health and Social Care Management, Mr Conradi also described HSIB’s relationship with NHSE as “ambivalent”. “It wobbled along that sort of line and got worse as time has gone on,” he said. “At the very start I had a chat with the permanent secretary of the Department of Health and said we would be better off in the department than NHS England. He disagreed and felt that we’d be too close to [then health secretary] Jeremy Hunt, and particularly at that time that would have a negative effect.” Mr Conradi was also critical of the decision to ask HSIB to take on investigations into maternity care early in its life. He said he was “shocked” that it happened so quickly “when we hadn’t really got going”. He continued: “We hadn’t developed a method of doing normal national investigations and suddenly we were being asked to do maternity ones. There was a huge amount of pressure to do this.” Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 28 June 2022
  19. Content Article
    The medical communities commitment to patient safety has withered over the past 10-15 years after the original call for action in 2000 with the release of the IOM report. What was once a call for action, safety in hospitals and oversight by government has been deprioritised, defunded, and devalued, leaving patients like the authors of this article wondering: What happened to patient safety?
  20. News Article
    Henrietta Hughes has been named as the government’s preferred candidate for the role of Patient Safety Commissioner. Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, has today, 20 June 2022, invited the Health and Social Care Committee to hold a pre-appointment scrutiny hearing with Henrietta. Henrietta is a practising GP with a background in women’s health who was the National Guardian for the NHS until 2021. In addition to her clinical work, she is an appraiser for NHS England and Chair of Childhood First. She was selected following an open public appointment process to appoint the first Patient Safety Commissioner. Following the select committee hearing, the committee will set out its views on the candidate’s suitability for the role. The Secretary of State will then consider the committee’s report before making a final decision on the appointment. Source: Gov.UK, 20 June 2022
  21. Content Article
    A podcast from The QI Guy, Jonathan O’Reilly. Each month Jonathan speaks to a leader, implementer or educator in the field of quality improvement in the UK’s public services and beyond. In this episode Jonathan speaks to Patient Safety Learning's Helen Hughes and Claire Cox, Patient Safety Lead at Kings College NHS Foundation Trust, about patient safety,
  22. Content Article
    The NHS is the pride of Britain. It’s an army of highly skilled and talented healthcare professionals, armed with the most cutting-edge therapies and medicines, and a budget bigger than the GDP of most countries in the world. Yet avoidable failures are common. And the result is tragic deaths up and down the country every day. Jeremy Hunt, the longest-serving Health Secretary in history, knows exactly what the cost is. In the letters he received from bereaved family members, he was constantly confronted by the heart-breaking reality of slip-ups and mistakes. There is increasing conflict between public pride in the NHS and the exhausted daily reality for many doctors and nurses, now experiencing burnout in record numbers. Waiting lists are up, staffing numbers inadequate, and all the while an ageing population and medical advances increase both demand and expectations. With pressures like these, is it surprising that mistakes start to creep in? This great British institution is crying out for renewal. In Zero, taking the broadest approach, thinking through everything from staffing to technology, budgets to culture, Hunt presents a manifesto for that renewal.
  23. Content Article
    In May 2022, the National Steering Committee for Patient Safety (NSC) issued the Declaration to Advance Patient Safety to urge health care leaders across the continuum of care to recommit to advancing patient and workforce safety. The NSC called for immediate action to address safety from a total systems approach, as presented in the National Action Plan to Advance Patient Safety, and implored leaders to adopt safety as a core value and foster collective action to uphold this value.
  24. News Article
    ECRI, the nation's largest patient safety organization, announces its unity with the United States' top safety experts in calling for a total systems approach to safety, a theme that was the central focus at the May 2022 Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Patient Safety Congress. During its annual convening of national safety leaders, IHI leadership announced its Declaration to Advance Patient Safety, an initiative focused on addressing safety from a total systems approach, as presented in the 2020 National Action Plan to Advance Patient Safety. "As a member of the National Steering Committee for Patient Safety that created the National Action Plan to Advance Patient Safety, ECRI fully supports this renewed call to action as outlined in the recent Declaration," states Chief Medical Officer Dheerendra Kommala, MD. "ECRI, the most trusted voice in healthcare, is in a unique position to deliver a comprehensive, robust solution that reduces preventable harm." ECRI's total system approach to advancing safety includes the design and implementation of a proactive, coordinated strategy to establish healthcare safety processes that impact patients, families, visitors, and healthcare workers across the continuum of care. Read full story Source: CISION, 26 May 2022
  25. Content Article
    Forty-two Integrated Care Systems (ICSs) in England are set to become new statutory bodies from July 2022, marking a significant shift in how health and care services are planned and delivered towards a model of joined-up partnership working and coordination. At the Health Plus Care conference on the 18 May 2022, Patient Safety Learning's Chief Executive Helen Hughes, Maggie Boyd, Associate Consultant at NHS Arden & GEM Commissioning Support Unit, Sue Braysher, Managing Director at Bluebellwoods Consulting and Graham Hewett, Associate Director of Quality at NHS South East London Clinical Commissioning Group, discussed the development of ICSs in the context of patient safety. They considered the opportunities and challenges that this presents and the need to embed patient safety in the culture, leadership and new governance structures. See attached their presentation slides.
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