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Found 479 results
  1. Content Article
    The last two years have been unprecedented for the NHS. The COVID-19 pandemic has presented a unique set of challenges and required innovative new ways of working to provide an effective response. As part of that response, the NHS adopted special payment arrangements for 2020/21 and 2021/22, removed the requirement for trusts to sign formal contracts and disapplied financial sanctions for failure to achieve national standards. The Commissioning for Quality and Innovation (CQUIN) financial incentive scheme was also suspended for the entire period. To support the NHS to achieve its recovery priorities, CQUIN is being reintroduced from 2022/23. This document sets out the requirements for all providers of healthcare services that are commissioned under an NHS Standard Contract (full-length or shorter-form version) and are within the scope of the Aligned Payment and Incentives (API) rules, as set out in the National Tariff and Payment System. These requirements take effect from 1 April 2022.
  2. Content Article
    The Regulation and Quality Improvement Authority (RQIA) has published its independent 'Review of the implementation of recommendations to prevent choking incidents in Northern Ireland'. The Review examined the measures and governance arrangements in place to prevent choking, in line with current guidance, focusing on the work undertaken in high-risk areas across health and social care, including stroke care, care of the elderly and services for those with physical and/or mental health and learning disabilities. The Review found that there was a clear and urgent need to improve the quality and safety of care provided to people at risk of choking. The key recommendations in the Review include: training for staff including clinicians, catering and domestic teams; shorter waiting times for assessment by Speech and Language Therapy; better systems for communication between staff, and safer systems for ordering and storing food.
  3. Content Article
    To tackle the serious harms, up to and including death, associated with eating disorders it is crucial that more is done to identify them at the earliest stage possible so that the appropriate care and treatment can be provided. The aim of this guidance from the Royal College of Psychiatrists is to make preventable deaths due to eating disorders a thing of the past.
  4. Content Article
    The formation of Integrated Care Systems (ICS) as part of the Government’s plan to integrate health and social care ought to be an opportunity for a once-in-a-generation improvement in the quality of social care provision. For too long the social care sector has been in crisis due to increasing demands on the system which have not been met with enough funding or a sensible organisational structure.  Integration, if done properly, would alleviate many of the current problems and result in a better care experience for those who need care. However if integration is mishandled the Government will miss this unique opportunity and the crisis will continue, and indeed probably become more acute.
  5. Content Article
    In a UK-first report launched in the House of Commons, leading figures from charity, healthcare, industry, law and academia have outlined a collaborative vision for UK leadership to improve maternal health. The Healthy Mum, Healthy Baby, Healthy Future: The Case for UK Leadership in the Development of Safe, Effective and Accessible Medicines for Use in Pregnancy report proposes a clear roadmap to improve the lives of millions of people, not just for women while they are pregnant, but for future generations. Over the past year, a Birmingham Health Partners led Policy Commission – co-chaired by Baroness Manningham-Buller, Co-president of Chatham House and Professor Peter Brocklehurst, University of Birmingham – has heard from key stakeholders on how best to develop safe, effective and accessible medicines for use in pregnancy. Compelling evidence gathered throughout the process has informed eight critical recommendations which, if implemented by government, will successfully prevent needless deaths and find new therapeutics to treat life-threatening conditions affecting mothers and their babies.
  6. Content Article
    The Queen Elizabeth University Hospital Review was prompted by public and political concern following reports of the deaths of three patients between December 2018 and February 2019. The deaths had been linked to rare microorganisms and concern was growing that these organisms were in turn linked to the built environment at the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (QEUH) and Royal Hospital for Children (RHC). The Review's remit was: “To establish whether the design, build, commissioning and maintenance of the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital and Royal Hospital for Children has had an adverse impact on the risk of Healthcare Associated Infection and whether there is wider learning for NHS Scotland”.
  7. Content Article
    The rapid uptake of digital healthcare channels offers huge benefits, but evidence also suggests a close correlation between digital exclusion and social disadvantage. People with protected characteristics under the Equality Act are among those least likely to have access to the internet and the skills needed to use it. Experts from across health and care came together to contribute to "Access Denied", a new whitepaper on digital health inequalities. This whitepaper sets out recommendations to ensure that those innovating in digital healthcare can do so in a way which addresses healthcare inequalities.
  8. Content Article
    Specialised services typically care for small numbers of patients with rare or complex conditions. They are commonly overlooked in debates around the future of the NHS. This is despite costs growing by over 50% in eight years, and now exceeding £20bn per year. The spotlight is returning, with proposals from NHS England to change how these services are planned, with power and responsibility being devolved down to new Integrated Care Boards – sub-regional structures across England. This report sets out a series of recommendations which Policy Exchange believe should underpin these reforms, including refinement of the services into more logical groupings, an expanded role for patient and carer input into service design, and stronger ministerial and financial oversight to ensure the sustainability of service delivery for the longer term.
  9. Content Article
    This instalment of Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM)’s Acute Insight Series summarises key issues in mental health emergency care and provides recommendations for policymakers, NHS England, Integrated Care Systems, and Trusts to enable patients to access emergency mental healthcare in a safe, efficient, and timely manner.
  10. Content Article
    Formal evaluations of programmes are an important source of learning about the challenges faced in improving quality in healthcare and how they can be addressed. The authors of this narrative review in BMJ Quality & Safety aimed to integrate lessons from evaluations of the Health Foundation's improvement programmes with relevant literature. They argue that securing improvement may be hard and slow and faces many challenges, but formal evaluations assist in recognising the nature of these challenges and help in addressing them.
  11. Content Article
    The Ockenden review into the failings in maternity care at Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust in the UK makes for sobering reading. The review focuses predominantly on the period from 2000 to 2019 and estimates that there were significant or major concerns in the care of nine women and more than 200 babies who died while receiving care at the Trust. Many more women and babies suffered serious injuries. It was clear that the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust did not investigate, learn, change, or listen to families when adverse events occurred. The conclusions of the Ockenden review make it clear that safe staffing levels, a well trained workforce, an ability to learn from incidents, and a willingness and ability to listen to families are all crucial for safe maternity care.
  12. Content Article
    The European Network for Safer Healthcare (ENSH) joined forces with the European Association of Urology Nurses (EAUN) to work on a policy campaign to prevent catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI) in Europe as a path to improving patient safety and preventing anti-microbial resistance (AMR) through: Improvement of adherence to existing European guidelines to prevent CAUTI. Development of European indicators to support the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) and/or national surveillance systems.
  13. Content Article
    In this blog, Ian Lavery, Senior Investigation Science Educator at the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) summarises a presentation given to HSIB staff by healthcare improvement expert Professor Mary Dixon-Woods. The presentation highlighted that a recommendation alone could fall short of the intended impact on the healthcare system. It looked at creating recommendations to respond to real world working, the importance of involving people most affected by patient safety incidents and why it's vital to look at when things go right.
  14. Content Article
    Last week the Professional Standards Authority for Health and Social Care (PSA) published a new report, Safer care for all – solutions from professional regulation and beyond, which examines the current state of professional health and care regulation in the UK. In this blog, Patient Safety Learning considers this report from a patient safety perspective.  PSA's chief executive, Alan Clamp, has also written a blog for the hub on the report, which can be read here.
  15. Content Article
    This guideline from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) covers assessment, management and preventing recurrence for children, young people and adults who have self-harmed. It includes those with a mental health problem, neurodevelopmental disorder or learning disability and applies to all sectors that work with people who have self-harmed.
  16. Content Article
    This is an Early Day Motion tabled in the House of Commons on 5 September 2022, which calls on the Government to implement the recommendations of the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review in full, in particular recommendation 4 of the report calling for the establishment of separate schemes to meet the costs of additional care and support to those who have suffered avoidable harm.
  17. Content Article
    This Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) investigation aims to help improve patient safety in relation to the use of a flush fluid and blood sampling from an arterial line in people who are critically ill in hospital. As its ‘reference case’, the investigation uses the experience of Keith, a 66 year old man who during a stay in a clinical care unit had blood samples taken from an arterial line which were contaminated with the flush fluid containing glucose. As a result he received incorrect treatment which led to his blood glucose levels being reduced to below the recommended limit.
  18. Content Article
    Health inequalities are not inevitable and are unfair. Many people from different backgrounds across our society suffer health inequalities which can negatively impact the whole community, not just those directly affected. Birmingham and Lewisham African Caribbean Health Inequalities Review (BLACHIR) set out to urgently reveal and explore the background to health inequalities experienced by the Black African and Black Caribbean communities. Birmingham is home to 8% of the Black African and Black Caribbean populations in England and 23% of Lewisham’s population is Black African or Black Caribbean (ONS 2011). The main aim of the Review is to improve the health of Black African and Black Caribbean people in the communities by listening to them, recognising their priorities, discussing, and reflecting on the findings and coproducing recommended solutions for the Health and Wellbeing Board and NHS Integrated Care Systems to consider and respond to.
  19. Content Article
    This report provides a review of the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) maternity investigation programme during 2021/22, including an overview of activity during this period, themes arising from investigations and plans for the future. It is intended for healthcare organisations, policymakers and the public to understand the work HSIB have undertaken.
  20. Content Article
    This is the first in a new series of ‘In Conversation with’ podcasts from the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on First Do No Harm. In this episode Lord Philip Hunt discusses the key achievements of the Health and Care Act 2022 of relevance to the APPG’s work, and the areas still left to address.  The APPG on First Do No Harm is a group of parliamentarians who are committed to raising awareness of and building support for the recommendations in First Do No Harm, the report of the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review, and to ensure the implementation of the recommendations by the UK Government and others.
  21. Content Article
    This thesis by Suzette Woodward describes a project that aimed to identify how the National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) could support improvement in implementing patient safety guidance. It explored the factors that help or hinder successful implementation and its findings led to the design and development of an implementation toolkit, initially targeted at NPSA staff and other national bodies responsible for issuing guidance about safer practices.
  22. Content Article
    This landmark report from the Leapfrog Group, an independent national healthcare safety watchdog in the US, is the result of an intensive year-long effort bringing together the nation’s leading experts on diagnostic excellence, including physicians, nurses, patients, health plans, and employers. Together, the multi-stakeholder group reviewed the evidence and identified 29 evidence-based actions hospitals can implement now to protect patients from harm or death due to diagnostic errors. Diagnostic errors contribute to 40,000-80,000 deaths a year, with over 250,000 Americans experiencing a diagnostic error in hospitals. This includes delayed, wrong, and missed diagnoses, and those that are not effectively communicated to the patient.
  23. Content Article
    On 1 November 2022, Dr Bill Kirkup, HSIB's Clinical Director of Maternity Investigations, and lead investigator for the investigation into maternity and neonatal services at East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust, presented the investigation report: 'Reading the signals' in a seminar delivered to HSIB staff.
  24. Content Article
    Published on 19 October 2022, the report of the investigation into maternity and neonatal services at East Kent Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust revealed a series of serious patient safety failings between 2009 and 2020, which resulted in avoidable harm to patients and deaths. The investigation found that if nationally recognised standards had been followed, the outcome could have been different in 97 of the 202 cases reviewed. In this article, Patient Safety Learning analyses the findings of this report from a broad patient safety perspective, focusing on five key themes that are consistent with many other serious patient safety inquiries and reports in recent years. It sets these in their wider context and highlights the need for a fundamental transformation in our approach to patient safety if similar scandals are to be prevented in the future.
  25. Content Article
    The APPG held their annual general meeting in Parliament. Baroness Cumberlege was re-elected as Co-Chair of the group and in light of Jeremy Hunt’s recent appointment as Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sharon Hodgson MP was elected as Co-Chair, having previously supported the Group as Vice-Chair over the last calendar year. Sharon is is an Officer of the APPG for Valproate and other Anti-Epileptic Drugs in Pregnancy and Vice-Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Surgical Mesh. The current serving Vice-Chairs were re-elected, with the addition of Baroness Ritchie also joining as Vice-Chair. The Group looked back on a year of significant activity and progress, including the appointment of Dr Henrietta Hughes as the first Patient Safety Commissioner in England, and agreed that a renewed focus on seeking the implementation of redress schemes should be a priority for the Group over the next year.
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