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Showing results for tags 'Recommendations'.
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Content ArticleBelow is the recommendation for NHS Scotland made by the Scottish Health Technologies Group (SHTG). SHTG was asked by the Scottish Government to explore a series of questions relating to the use of surgical mesh in the elective repair of abdominal and groin hernias in all adults.
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- Medical device
- Surgery - General
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Content ArticleThe Health and Social Care Committee calls for urgent action to prevent mental health services slipping backwards as a result of additional demand created by the pandemic and the scale of unmet need prior to it.
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- Mental health
- Children and Young People
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Content ArticleProviding high-quality care means putting patient safety at the forefront of every action and decision made in the provision of healthcare services. To achieve this requires the conditions of close cooperation, good communication and the application of effective systems, processes and controls - through good governance. This investigation carried out by Niche Health and & Social Care Consulting describes a complex and evolving set of circumstances where these conditions were not met at Morecambe Bay and which played-out negatively over many years, resulting in uncontrolled legacy. A primary objective of this investigation has been to seek a full and validated understanding of any patient harms or clinically untoward outcomes in Urology. Particularly, but not exclusively, to validate concerns raised publicly in the ‘whistleblowing’ publication Whistle in the Wind. The investigation found a multi-faceted set of contributory issues which cannot, in many cases, be singularly applied to individual Consultant failings.
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- Investigation
- Medicine - Genitourinary
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Content ArticleThe People’s Covid Inquiry, chaired by the human rights lawyer Michael Mansfield QC, began in January 2021 to learn lessons quickly after the government rejected calls for a public inquiry. The Government was informed of the inquiry on 23 February 2021 and invited to take part. No response was received. The first session of the People’s Covid Inquiry began on 24 February and convened in live sessions fortnightly until 16 June 2021. The Inquiry took evidence over nine sessions from over 40 witnesses including international and UK experts, frontline workers, bereaved families, trade union leaders, and representatives of disabled people’s and pensioners’ organisations.
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- Investigation
- Pandemic
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Content ArticleThis joint letter calls on Maria Caulfield MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Patient Safety and Primary Care, to implement in full the recommendations of the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety (IMMDS) Review on behalf of those harmed by the side effects of Primodos, Mesh and Sodium Valproate. It is signed by Marie Lyon from the Association for Children Damaged by Hormone Pregnancy Tests, Kath Sansom from Sling The Mesh and Emma Murphy and Janet Williams from In-Fact.
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- Womens health
- Regulatory issue
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Content ArticleThis is the transcript of a Westminster Hall debate in the House of Commons on fulfilling the recommendations of the Cumberlege Report.
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- Medical device
- Medication
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Community PostAbout 1000 angry nurses and doctors have rallied outside Perth Children’s Hospital in Australia following the death of seven-year-old Aishwarya Aswath, demanding vital improvements to the state’s struggling health system. The Australian Nurses Federation was joined by the Australian Medical Association for the rally, with staff from hospitals across Perth attending. Many people held signs that read “We care about Aishwarya”, “Listen to frontline staff”, “Report the executive — not us” and “Please don’t throw me under the bus”. Aishwarya developed a fever on Good Friday and was taken to Perth Children’s Hospital the next day, but had to wait about two hours in the emergency department before she received treatment. She died soon after from a bacterial infection. An internal report into the tragedy made 11 recommendations — including improvement to the triage process, a clear way for parents to escalate concerns and a review of cultural awareness for staff — but Aishwarya’s parents said the report raised more questions than it answered. The family wants a broader independent inquiry to look at all 21 near-misses in the past 15 months – not just their daughter’s case. Some people have been referred to medical authorities, while Child and Adolescent Health Service chair Debbie Karasinski resigned after the report.' I am encouraged to see the way healthcare staff reacted to this tragedy. Imagine a similar event in England, would nurses protest outside the hospital and stand up to authority like this? I doubt it very much, which is very sad reflection on the prevailing culture and health leadership in England. What do others think? Source: The Australian. 9 July 2021 Picture: Picture: 9 News
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- Accident and Emergency
- Children and Young People
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Content ArticleMost healthcare organisations (HCOs) find diagnostic errors hard to address. Singh et al. developed a checklist (the Safer Dx Checklist) of 10 high-priority safety practices HCOs can use to conduct a proactive risk assessment to address diagnostic error.
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- Diagnostic error
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Content ArticleDuring pregnancy, and up to one year after birth, one in five women will experience mental health issues, ranging from anxiety and depression to more severe illness. For those women experiencing mental ill-health, barriers often exist preventing them from accessing care, including variation in availability of service, care, and treatment. These are often worsened by cultural stigma, previous trauma, deprivation, and discrimination. This document by the Royal College of Midwives outlines recommendations to ensure that women are offered, and can access, the right support at the right time during their perinatal journey.
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- Maternity
- Mental health
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Content ArticleThis is the report of a review into how the executive leadership of the NHS could be better supported and empowered to ensure the best possible service is delivered for patients. Sir Ron Kerr was commissioned by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) to conduct the review, which focused on three issues in particular: The expectations and support available for leaders - particularly those in challenging organisations and systems The scope for further alignment of performance management expectations at the organisational and system level The options for reducing the administrative burden placed on executive leaders The report describes the methodology of the review, outlines its findings and makes a number of recommendations around these issues.
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- Leadership
- Resources / Organisational management
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Content ArticleOn the 20 February 2019 an investigation commenced into the death of Bethan Naomi Harris who was born on the 16 November 2018 at the St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Bethan Naomi Harris died at Shooting Star Hospice on the 26 November 2018. Her mother's pregnancy had been uneventful. After admission to labour ward labour progressed very quickly indeed and Bethan sustained severe brain injury during delivery. Despite best efforts by the neonatal team she succumbed to her injuries. The Investigation concluded at the end of the Inquest on the 19 November 2019. The conclusion of the inquest was that the medical cause of Bethan's death was (1a) hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy.
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- Baby
- Patient death
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Content ArticleThis report provides a review of the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) maternity investigation programme during 2022/23. During this period HSIB completed 702 reports and made more than 1,380 safety recommendations.
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- Investigation
- Maternity
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Content Article
HSIB Annual Review 2022/23 (1 August 2023)
Mark Hughes posted an article in HSSIB investigations
The Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) Annual Review 2022/23 looks back at its work over this period, during which HSIB published 16 investigation reports and issued 36 safety recommendations to 13 different organisation. -
Content ArticleThese new updated guidelines, produced in collaboration between the Healthcare Infection Society and The European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, used NICE-accredited methodology to provide further advice on which practices in the operating theatre are unnecessary. The guidelines are intended for an international audience. Specifically, they discuss the current available evidence for different rituals that are commonplace in the operating theatre and highlight the gaps in knowledge with recommendations for future research.
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- Infection control
- Safety behaviour
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Content ArticleCoroners, who hold inquests to determine the causes of unnatural deaths in England and Wales, having recognised factors that could cause other deaths, are legally obliged to signal concerns by sending ‘Reports to Prevent Future Deaths’ (PFDs) to interested persons. This systematic review in Pharmaceutical Medicine aimed to establish whether Coroners’ concerns about medications are widely recognised. The authors found that PFDs related to medicines are not widely referred to in medical journals or UK national newspapers. By contrast, the Australian and New Zealand National Coronial Information System has contributed cases to 206 publications cited in PubMed, of which 139 are related to medicines. The research suggests that information from English and Welsh Coroners’ PFDs is under-recognised, even though it should inform public health. The results of inquiries by Coroners and medical examiners worldwide into potentially preventable deaths involving medicines should be used to strengthen the safety of medicines.
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- Medication
- Coroner
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Content ArticleAt the time of her death, Heather Findlay, aged 28 years, was in the care of the East London Foundation Trust (ELFT), detained under section 2 of the Mental Health Act at Mile End Hospital. At approximately 3pm on 11 June 2020, she was on s17 escorted leave, standing with a healthcare assistant (HCA) at the front gates of the hospital having a cigarette, when she turned to the HCA, said “I’m sorry I have to do this to you” and ran away. ELFT contacted the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) at 3.17pm, but by 3.58pm, Ms Findlay had been found by a member of the public in a nearby park. At inquest, the jury came to a conclusion of death by suicide and giving a medical cause of death of: 1a hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy 1b sodium nitrate toxicity.
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- Patient death
- Coroner reports
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Content ArticleThe Health and Social Care Select Committee report on the future of general practice examined the pressure currently facing general practice, highlighting the challenges being faced by general practice and provided clear recommendations to respond to them. This document sets out the Government’s reply to each of these recommendations.
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- GP practice
- GP
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Content Article
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Community Post
Practical tips to help keep patients safe
PatientSafetyLearning Team posted a topic in Improving patient safety
- Safety assessment
- Organisational learning
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Stephen Moss, Patient Safety Learning Trustee, suggests four practical tips to help staff keep patients safe: With your colleagues ask a random selection of patients if they have felt unsafe in the last 24 hours (you might want to select a different form of words). If the answer is yes, get under the skin of why they have felt unsafe, pool the knowledge and agree what action you are going to take, or what might need escalating to your line manager. Have a discussion with your colleagues about how you can support each other to uphold your values and professionalism when the going gets tough. Be clear about what help you might need from outside of the team, and follow it up. When looking at your Ward Assurance results, satisfy yourself that where it is possible, they are outcome orientated rather than just focusing on compliance with a process. Look for ways of 'humanising' the data i.e. use a language that identifies the impact on patients and, importantly, use language throughout that will be understood by patients and the public. Too many times I see Ward Assurance results on ward corridors, for the attention of patients and families, written in 'NHS speak' ! When measuring your compliance with the Duty of Candour, don't just look at the numbers! Find a way that also establishes how families feel about the 'quality' of the response, i.e. was it open, honest and transparent and did it give what they needed. How do you think these tips could benefit your patients or service users? Have you tried anything similar that you've found has really helped? Let us know your thoughts and please feedback if you try any of them.- Posted
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- Safety assessment
- Organisational learning
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Community PostWe know from academic research that patient engagement reduces the risk of unsafe care and harm, in patients own care and improving safety for all. Some organisations are investing time (if not money!) in recruiting, training and supporting patient leaders to work with Executives and senior staff, sharing their experience and as they engage with staff and patients, report back what they see. The model in Berkshire, as shared with me by Douglas Findlay, patient leader, is that they don’t make decisions on what needs to change and how, but report back what they see for others to learn and act. Do we know of other models of good practice? What can we learn and share from them?
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- 29 replies
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- Patient engagement
- Information sharing
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Content ArticleThis article from Sarcoma UK was written by Dermot’s family to develop their reflections and recommendations on the recent publication of the Healthcare Safety Investigation (HSIB) report, Variations in the delivery of palliative care services to adults.
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- Cancer
- Patient / family involvement
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Content ArticleIn July 2018, the then Minister of State for Health, Stephen Barclay MP, commissioned Tom Kark QC to write a report and to make recommendations in relation to the fit and proper person test (FPPT) as it applied under Regulation 5 of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. The Tom Kark QC review of the fit and proper person test (the Kark review) was published in February 2019 and made seven recommendations on how to improve the operation and effectiveness of Regulation 5.
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- Staff factors
- Skills
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Content ArticleOn the 23 January 2023 the Minister for Mental Health and Women’s Health Strategy, Maria Caulfield MP, announced the commencement of a rapid review into patient safety in mental health inpatient settings in England. The review Chair, Dr Geraldine Strathdee, was asked to consider how improvements could be made to the way that data and information is used in relation to patient safety in mental health inpatient care settings and pathways, including for people with a learning disability and autistic people. This report contains the findings of this review and an associated set of recommendations.
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- Mental health
- Mental health unit
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Content ArticleThis report highlights the failure to learn from preventable state related deaths in the UK. It focuses on concerns around the implementation of recommendations following inquests, public inquiries, investigations and official reviews, calling for the creation of a new independent public body, a National Oversight Mechanism, to address this. The report was launched as part of the ‘No more deaths’ campaign by Inquest, an independent charity combining specialist support for bereaved people following a state related death with campaigning for justice and change.
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- Coroner reports
- Coroner
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