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Showing results for tags 'Psychological safety'.
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Content ArticleAssessment of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) provides valuable information to inform patient-centered care, but may also reveal 'PRO alerts': psychological distress or physical symptoms that may require an immediate response. Ad-hoc management of PRO alerts in clinical trials may result in suboptimal patient care or potentially bias trial results. To gain greater understanding of current practice in PRO alert management, Kyte et al. conducted a national survey of personnel involved in clinical trials with a PRO endpoint.
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Content ArticleAt the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Lancashire Teaching Hospitals Trust recognised that more staff would need to access psychology services. This case study shows how the Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust has implemented a psychological support service for its staff. Almost 1000 staff have been able to access psychological support since adopting new pathways as part of their overall health and wellbeing offer.
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Content ArticleThis white paper sets out the symbiotic relationship between healthcare worker safety and patient safety. It makes the case for a new focus on improvements in patient and healthcare worker safety, and on the relationship between them, to prevent safety incidents and deliver better outcomes for all. It has been published by the Safety for All campaign, set up by the Safer Healthcare and Biosafety Network (SHBN), an independent forum focused on improving healthcare worker and patient safety, including Patient Safety Learning and the Association of British HealthTech Industries.
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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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Content ArticleThe NHS is in the process of changing the way it embraces patient safety, moving from a focus on individual incidents and issues to a more comprehensive look at system learning. The changes are set out in NHS England/Improvement’s Patient Safety Strategy, released in July 2019 and updated in February 2021. This was followed by the Patient Safety Investigation Framework in March 2020, due for full implementation by Spring 2022. They are important not just in relation to incident management but also because of the implications they have for strategy and board responsibilities in relation to patient safety. So they need careful attention at all levels of NHS organisations. This article from the Good Governance Institute highlights the safety roles and responsibilities of organisations and moving to a proactive approach to safety management.
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Content ArticleSession recordings from the ISQua 'Hospital Workers' Wellbeing Matters' conference.
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Content ArticleAmy Edmondson, the Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at Harvard Business School, talks about building a psychological safe workplace for staff in this TEDx talk.
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Content Article
"Am I safe?" Presented by Lee Fleisher (31 March 2021)
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Good practice
“We have to create the culture of learning; the culture of having a safe space, the culture of wanting to do better and learning those conditions in which we do do better” This powerful talk looks directly at how a clear approach to patient safety really can improve the standard of care where you work. What is the culture of quality and safety that you’re trying to embed, can you actually do better? Learn why it’s important to focus on psychological safety; “if people start being scared, everyone gets scared then it expands”. Learn how an evidence based approach can allow us to tackle these issues rather than shy away from them; “what factors are maintaining safety? How do we get to good outcomes? What are the things working well? How do we understand human variation?”. Presented by Lee Fleisher, Emeritus Professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, University of Pennsylvania.- Posted
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Content ArticleWhile the benefits of psychological safety are well established, a new survey suggests how leaders, by developing specific skills, can create a safer and higher-performance work environment.
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Content ArticleIt has become imperative that we discuss the issue of mental health in doctors and other healthcare staff. The mental wellbeing of a healthcare staff forms the bedrock of patient safety. It takes a safe and supported person to deliver safe healthcare and we must give this attention as we try to find ways to improve the quality of care within our healthcare systems. Ehi Iden, hub topic lead for Occupational Health and Safety, OSHAfrica, reflects on the increasing workload and pressure healthcare professionals face, the impact this has on patient safety and why we need to start 're-humanising' the workplace.
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Content Article
Staff safety and wellbeing
Becky T posted an article in Staff safety
An original article that explores the significance of both staff physical safety in the workplace as well as their psychological safety and wellbeing. In particular, I highlight the impact the COVID-19 pandemic has had on both these areas, and discuss the importance of ensuring all aspects of staff safety.- Posted
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Content ArticleThis rapid response to the article 'What is a good doctor and how can we make one?', published on the BMJ website, discusses the background to the Biopsychosocial Model and it's implications in clinical practice today. The author highlights the importance of taking psychosocial factors into consideration, such as diet or loneliness, in order to improve individualised patient treatment.
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What psychological safety is not
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Staff safety
In this article, the author describes what psychological safety is, but how it is often misinterpreted and misapplied by organisations. The article details how psychological safety should be apolitical and enable for a person to be included, learn, contribute and challenge the status quo. -
Content ArticleIn this webinar recording Tim McDonald, Chief Patient Safety and Risk Officer at RLDatix, and Phil Taylor, Chief Product Officer at RLDatix, describe a paradigm shift in the approach to preventing and responding to patient harm that includes establishment of a psychologically safe culture and management of harm that includes the benefits of providing effective empathic peer support for health care workers involved in harm events. They also emphasise the importance of the need to integrate the concepts of high reliability and human factors safety science into these compassionate patient safety efforts.
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Content ArticlePsychological safety (speaking up about ideas and concerns, free from interpersonal risk) is essential in high-risk environments, such as healthcare settings. This study, Enhancing psychological safety in mental health services, considers this issue within the context of mental health services. It provides an overview of the types of strategies and interventions for increasing the ethos of psychological safety and setting the foundations for delivering an organisation-wide programme on this topic. It also lists of key targeted areas in mental health that would maximally benefit from increasing psychological safety, both in clinical and non-clinical settings. Psychological safety as a cornerstone of improvement: blog by Joe Rafferty, Mersey Care Psychological safety and the critical role of leadership development (McKinsey and Company) The role of psychological safety in diversity and inclusion (Amy Edmondson) Three ways to create psychological safety in healthcare (Institute for Healthcare Improvement)
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Content ArticlePsychological safety, a shared belief that interpersonal risk taking is safe, is an important determinant of incident reporting. However, how psychological safety affects near-miss reporting is unclear, as near misses contain contrasting cues that highlight both resilience (“we avoided failure”) and vulnerability (“we nearly failed”). Near misses offer learning opportunities for addressing underlying causes of potential incidents, and it is crucial to understand what facilitates near-miss reporting. This study by Jung et al. found near misses are not processed and reported equally. The effect of psychological safety on reporting near misses becomes stronger with their increasing proximity to a negative outcome. Educating healthcare workers to properly identify near misses and fostering psychological safety may increase near-miss reporting and improve patient safety.
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Content ArticleJoe Rafferty, Chief Executive of Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust, explains Mersey Care's strategy to pursue 'perfect care' and why it requires a cultural shift that is dependent on a paradigm shift in mind-set, behaviour and practice.
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Content Article
You ok doc? Supporting doctors' mental health
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Staff safety
How often do we visit our doctor for guidance on our health, however, who asks after the doctor's health? When faced with life or death situations on a daily basis, that demands scrupulous attention to detail, across unsocial shift patterns; the option of ‘normal’ life seems unimaginable. In the last decade alone we have seen a rise in mental health issues for those working in healthcare. A recent study by the British Medical Association identified that almost 80% of all doctors are at high risk of burnout. An issue that used to arrive at the maturity of one's career, is now common in its nascency and is equating to growing rates of suicide. With a growing crisis around a serious issue, there is an urgent need to tackle the cultural taboos, training and opinions that are associated with mental health in our industry. 'You ok doc' is committed to not only supporting doctors' mental health through services like 'The Huddle', but also empowering doctors' wellbeing through bespoke mental and emotional health aids.- Posted
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Content Article
COVID Nursing and PTSD (December 2021)
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Blogs
In an article for the Patient Safety Journal, Cassandra Alexander, a nurse, shares what it is like on the front lines and the toll it has taken on her mental health—a deeply personal and painful story, yet a traumatic experience shared by many nurses around the United States. -
Content ArticlePatient Safety Learning and the Safer Healthcare and Biosafety Network (SHBN) are undertaking a project, working with patient safety experts and frontline staff, to produce a manual to support staff after a serious safety incident. As part of this work, we are asking healthcare staff to complete a short survey relating to experiences of a serious safety incident.
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Content ArticleIn this blog, a patient who experienced life-changing surgical complications describes the process of reconciliation between medical staff and patients when harm has occurred in healthcare. She highlights the need for both the patient and healthcare professional to be engaged and open in the process. She also looks at how different human factors can negatively impact on the duty of candour process, and why they need to be acknowledged. These factors include lack of communication, distraction, lack of resources, stress, complacency, lack of teamwork, pressure, lack of awareness, lack of knowledge, fatigue, lack of assertiveness and norms.
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EventuntilThe purpose of this webinar is to raise awareness of the relationship between culture, staff experience and retention with practical examples and data to aid improvement in practice. You will hear from a range of experts in the field with experience in developing and spreading best practice. The format is interactive, with delegate questions and panel discussion. Psychological safety programme: The Being Fair 2 report, stress claims and the Just and Learning Culture Charter | NHS Resolution Developing legacy mentoring in general practice nursing | NHS Devon ICB The benefits of creating a psychologically safe culture | Steed Consulting Contributors: Dr Anwar Khan - Senior Clinical Advisor for General Practice , NHS Resolution Samantha Thomas - National Safety and Learning Lead for General Practice, NHS Resolution Naomi Assame - Head of Safety and Learning, NHS Resolution Janice Steed- Director of Steed Consulting Sarah Hall and Sarah Harris - NHS Devon Integrated Care Board Register
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EventThis one day masterclass will focus on improving Patient Safety through enhancing psychological safety and safety culture. We will look at effective ways to encourage health professionals to routinely embed high-quality clinical evidence into their everyday work. We will explore the characteristics of relatively successful behaviour change interventions. Key learning objectives: Psychological safety. Safety culture. Behaviour. Human Factors. How to improve safety reporting. Register hub members receive a 20% discount. Email info@pslhub.org for discount code.
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EventThis one day masterclass will focus on improving patient safety through enhancing psychological safety and safety culture. It will look at effective ways to encourage health professionals to routinely embed high-quality clinical evidence into their everyday work. It will explore the characteristics of relatively successful behaviour change interventions. All Clinical Staff and Team Leads should attend. For further information and to book your place visit https://www.healthcareconferencesuk.co.uk/conferences-masterclasses/improving-psychological-safety-patient-safety or email aman@hc-uk.org.uk. hub members receive a 20% discount. Email info@pslhub.org for discount code.
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Event
Psychological safety - Dr Matt Hill
Patient Safety Learning posted an event in Community Calendar
Email rduh.qit@nhs,net to book a place.- Posted
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