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Showing results for tags 'Quality improvement'.
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Content Article
What is a driver diagram? (LifeQI, December 2022)
Patient_Safety_Learning posted an article in Quality Improvement
In this blog, by LifeQI, author Suzie Creighton unpicks the driver diagram, linking to further resources to help readers understand the following: Driver diagram – definition and what is a driver diagram used for? The anatomy of a driver diagram Where does the driver diagram fit in the QI journey -
Content ArticleThis article by The Health Foundation looks at an evaluation carried out by Warwick Business School of a partnership between The Virginia Mason Institute and five NHS trusts. The partnership aimed to develop a ‘lean’ culture of continuous improvement which puts patients first by developing a localised version of the Virginia Mason Production System in each of the trusts. The objective was to embed and sustain a culture of continuous improvement capability within each of these five trusts and the NHS more broadly. Outcomes from the evaluation include insight on progress and achievements in each trust, helping them to further embed a culture of improvement capability. The learning will also enable systems leaders to maximise knowledge on how to support providers to embed and spread a culture of continuous improvement in the NHS.
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- Quality improvement
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Content Article
Oesophago-gastric cancer report 2022 (NOGCA, 12 January 2023)
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Cancers
This report from the National Oesophago-Gastric Cancer Audit (NOGCA) focuses on the care received by patients diagnosed with invasive epithelial cancer of the oesophagus, gastro-oesophageal junction (GOJ) or stomach, or high-grade dysplasia (HGD) of the oesophagus between April 2019 and March 2021. For outcomes of curative surgery among people with OG cancer, data are reported for a three year period (April 2018 to March 2021).- Posted
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- Cancer
- Medicine - Gastreoenterology
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Content ArticleThis report from the National Asthma and COPD Audit Programme (NACAP) offers a view of the care of people with asthma and COPD in England and Wales, and is informed by 103,194 case records submitted to the audit programme. It is the first report to combine data on asthma, COPD and pulmonary rehabilitation across primary and secondary care services to underpin key messages, optimising respiratory care across the pathway.
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- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- Asthma
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Content ArticleAppreciative Inquiry (AI) is a transformational change methodology grounded in theories from the disciplines of human sciences and philosophy. It invites people to see themselves and the world through an appreciative or valuing eye. This article by AI strategist Robyn Stratton-Berkessel aims to provide an overview of AI for beginners, and covers: What is Appreciative Inquiry How it is a strengths-based, positive framework What it can achieve through collaborative conversations The 4-D process of Appreciative Inquiry – known as the Appreciative Inquiry Model How it can be applied personally and professionally The guiding principles (Including the new addition of the five emerging principles) The importance of Appreciative Inquiry questions – affirmatively-framed questions The value of story-telling in Appreciative Inquiry
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- Appreciative inquiry
- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleThe Leapfrog Group is a non-profit watchdog organisation that serves as a voice for healthcare consumers in the US, using their collective influence to foster positive change in healthcare. It provides patient safety ratings for hospitals, grading them from A to E. This article in Becker's Hospital Review highlights the patient safety priorities for 2023 of eleven US hospitals that have consistently been awarded 'A' grades by Leapfrog. Key themes include a focus on reducing healthcare associated infections, increasing psychological safety for staff and improving communication between staff and patients.
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- Healthcare associated infection
- USA
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Content ArticleThis is part of our series of Patient Safety Spotlight interviews, where we talk to people working for patient safety about their role and what motivates them. Ian talks to us about rebuilding patient trust in the healthcare system, how the Private Healthcare Information Network (PHIN) is helping to improve decision making for patients in the private sector, and why recognising the link between physical and mental health is vital to patient safety.
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- Private sector
- Data
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Content ArticleThis report commissioned by the NHS Confederation and written by the Centre for Mental Health sets out a vision for what mental health, autism and learning disability services in England should look like in ten years’ time. It brings together research and engagement with a wide range of stakeholders including people who bring personal and professional experience. The report identifies ten interconnecting themes that underpin the vision and three key requirements that would turn the vision into reality.
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- Mental health
- Quality improvement
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Content ArticleHealthcare-associated infection (HAI) prevention has been difficult for healthcare providers to maintain during the Covid-19 pandemic. This study summarises themes for maintaining infection prevention activities learnt from the implementation of a quality improvement (QI) programme in intensive care units (ICUs) during the pandemic. The authors of the study conducted qualitative analysis of participants’ semi-structured exit interviews, self-assessments on HAI prevention activities, participant-created action plans, chat-box discussions during webinars and informal correspondence. The study identified four themes for successful maintenance of infection prevention activities during the pandemic: the value of a pre-existing infection prevention infrastructure flexibility in approach broad buy-in for maintaining QI programmes the facilitation of idea-sharing.
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- Healthcare associated infection
- Pandemic
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Content ArticleHospital boards generally focus attention on measures to answer questions about risk, such as 'How safe are we now?' They are ultimately accountable for the quality of care delivered in hospitals, and data review is a key component of effective board governance. This editorial in BMJ Quality & Safety highlights the lack of guidance on the most effective format for presenting data to determine progress against key risks and targets. The authors argue that data must not be overly simplified and that charts prepared for boards should include monthly data points in graphic format over a longer period of time. This allows trends to be more visible and denotes whether an observed change is significant, helping hospital boards avoid erroneous conclusions tied to random variation.
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- Leadership
- Board member
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Content ArticleIn this video, Yvonne Silove from the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP), presents on HQIP datasets and offers top tips for data access. Yvonne's presentation was originally given at the Using Health and Social Care Datasets in Research event 'Lifting the lid on data—meet the data custodians'.
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- Data
- Accessibility
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Content ArticleUp to 30% of healthcare spending is considered unnecessary and represents systematic waste. While much attention has been given to low-value clinical tests and treatments, much less has focused on identifying low-value safety practices in healthcare settings. This study in the Journal of Patient Safety surveyed healthcare staff in the UK and Australia to identify safety practices perceived to be of low value. Staff who took part in a survey as part of the study frequently identified the following categories of practices as being low-value: paperwork, duplication and intentional rounding. Five cross-cutting themes (for example, 'covering ourselves') offered an underpinning rationale for why staff perceived these practices to be of low value. The authors conclude that in healthcare systems under strain, removing existing low-value practices should be a priority.
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- Safety culture
- Safety process
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Content ArticleThis case study published by the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP) highlights the Epilepsy12 Audit’s approach to working with children and young people to improve paediatric epilepsy care. Epilepsy12 Youth Advocates are epilepsy experienced or interested children, young people, families and an epilepsy specialist nurse. They volunteer together to shape Epilepsy12 and to lead improvement activities with families and epilepsy services. The audit won the Richard Driscoll Memorial Award (RDMA) 2022. The RDMA asks HQIP commissioned programmes to describe how patients and carers influence the production of the patient-focused outputs of the programme.
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- Children and Young People
- Paediatrics
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Content ArticleProfessor Mary Dixon-Woods looks at improving the quality and safety of care in hospitals, and suggests that we need to take a three-pronged approach: ensuring we are collecting the right data and interpreting it intelligently, looking at the systems we work in and finally how culture and behaviour impact on quality of care.
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- Organisational culture
- System safety
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Content ArticleVideo recording and slides of a webinar presented by Mary Dixon-Woods, Professor of Medical Sociology and Wellcome Trust Investigator.
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- Quality improvement
- Patient harmed
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Content ArticleIn this interview for the Betsy Lehman Center in Massachusetts, Lee Kim Erickson, Senior Vice President and Chief Quality Officer at Wellforce, talks about maintaining a focus on patient safety during times of crisis, the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on training for healthcare workers and the importance of maintaining a focus on care from the patient's point of view.
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- USA
- Quality improvement
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Content ArticleThis study, published in the Journal of Patient Safety, tells how Mackenzie Health responded to low safety culture scores by implementing a zero-harm strategy.
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- Organisational Performance
- System safety
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Content Article'What the HealthTech?' is a podcast from Radar Healthcare. A platform for professionals in health and social care to have open discussions on creating change, tackling challenges and making an impact on people’s lives. Each week Radar Healthcare talk to industry leaders, organisations making a difference and their team of experts to share ideas and learnings with you.
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- Healthcare
- Quality improvement
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Content ArticleThis article in the journal Contemporary Nurse discusses how appreciative inquiry (AI) may be used to promote workforce engagement and organisational learning and facilitate positive organisational change in a health care context.
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- Appreciative inquiry
- Innovation
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Content ArticleRoyal Cornwall QI conference online book supporting the conference. The online brochure highlights all the quality improvement projects at Royal Cornwall Hospitals.
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- Quality improvement
- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleFundamentals of Health Care Improvement: A Guide to Improving Your Patient’s Care, 4th edition, is intended to help health professional learners diagnose, measure, analyse, change and lead improvements in healthcare, with the aim to shape reliable, high-quality systems of care in partnership with patients. Copublished by Joint Commission Resources and the Institute of Healthcare Improvement, this fourth edition includes updated resources, including examples, figures, tables, and tools. New to this edition is a focus on health equity and disparities of care brought to light by the COVID-19 pandemic. This focus explores the relationship between social determinants of health and how improvement methods and skills can help identify and close disparity gaps in systems of care. Also new to this edition is an expanded discussion of effective teamwork and the importance of creating multidisciplinary health care teams that partner with patients and families.
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- Health inequalities
- Health Disparities
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Content ArticleThis is the first edition of the Patient safety assessment manual for primary care, which explains how to apply the Patient Safety Friendly Primary Care Framework. It comprises a set of standards that cover the different domains of patient safety. The Patient Safety Friendly Framework was developed by the WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean to assess patient safety at a system level. The framework provides a means to determine the level of patient safety for the purpose of initiating a patient safety or quality improvement programme. The evaluation is voluntary and is conducted through self-assessment and an external peer review survey. The standards in the Patient Safety Friendly Primary Care Framework are based on international research and evidenced-based practices in primary care. To ensure the standards remain current, revisions will be made every three to four years. In this edition, the total number of standards is 19, made up of 125 criteria. Standards have been developed with consideration for their alignment with all WHO initiatives to promote safer care.
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- Standards
- Assessment
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Content ArticleThis report by the Beryl Institute and Ipsos explores the core trends impacting healthcare and patient experience overall in the United States. It highlights key issues expressed by consumers in an online survey relating to quality of care and experience of care, taking into account the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and how it has altered the delivery of healthcare.