Search the hub
Showing results for tags 'Resilience'.
-
Content Article
Letter from America: Tomorrow is Another Day
lzipperer posted an article in Letter from America
'Letter from America’ is a Patient Safety Learning blog series highlighting fresh accomplishments in patient safety from the United States. The series covers successes large and small. I share them here to generate conversations through the hub, over a coffee and in staff rooms to transfer these innovations to the frontline of UK care delivery.- Posted
-
- Leadership
- Leadership style
- (and 5 more)
-
Content ArticleClinician burnout has been well-documented and is at record highs. The same issues that drive burnout also diminish joy in work for the healthcare workforce. Healthcare leaders need to understand what factors are diminishing joy in work, nurture their workforce, and address the issues that drive burnout and sap joy in work. The most joyful, productive, engaged staff feel both physically and psychologically safe, appreciate the meaning and purpose of their work, have some choice and control over their time, experience camaraderie with others at work, and perceive their work life to be fair and equitable. There are proven methods for creating a positive work environment that creates these conditions and ensures the commitment to deliver high-quality care to patients, even in stressful times.
-
Content Article
Caring for doctors, caring for patients (November 2019)
Claire Cox posted an article in Workforce and resources
Patient safety depends on doctors’ well-being. Medicine is a tough job, but it's made it far harder than it should be by neglecting the simple basics in caring for doctors’ well-being. The well-being of doctors is vital because there is abundant evidence that workplace stress in healthcare organisations affects quality of care for patients as well as doctors’ own health. In 2018 the General Medical Council asked Professor Michael West and Dame Denise Coia to carry out a UK-wide review into the factors which impact on the mental health and well-being of medical students and doctors. The detailed practical proposals in this report provide a road map to health service leaders faced with the challenge of developing healthy and sustainable workforces. -
Content Article
NHS leadership and culture: The King's Fund position (2019)
Claire Cox posted an article in Inquiries
Collaborative, inclusive and compassionate leadership is essential to deliver the highest quality care for patients and tackle deep-seated cultural issues in the NHS, including unacceptable levels of work-related stress, bullying and discrimination. Staff are the NHS’s greatest asset, but a number of challenges are taking a significant toll on the workforce. In addition to severe workforce pressures, including large numbers of staff vacancies, surveys have shown that staff experiences of working in the NHS can be very negative. In the 2018 NHS staff survey, 40 per cent of NHS staff reported feeling unwell as a result of work-related stress in the previous 12 months, 13 per cent said they had experienced bullying or harassment from managers and 19 per cent experienced it from other colleagues. This article gives the response from the Kingsfund on the recent NHS staff survey.- Posted
-
- Bullying
- Culture of fear
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Content ArticleAmy Edmondson, PhD, Harvard professor and speaker at Learn Serve Lead 2019: The AAMC Annual Meeting, talks about how to create an interpersonal climate that encourages input from all members of the patient care team.
- Posted
-
- Culture of fear
- Safety process
- (and 4 more)
-
Content ArticleAs part of its commitment to supporting the third sector, The King’s Fund works in partnership with GSK to run the GSK IMPACT Awards, which provide leadership development and funding for award winners.
- Posted
-
- Communication
- Leadership style
- (and 5 more)
-
Content ArticleTejal K. Gandhi, Institute for Healthcare Improvement's (IHI) Chief Clinical and Safety Officer, reflects on the World Health Organization (WHO) challenge to “Speak Up for Patient Safety” and how broadly it applies to improvement work.
- Posted
-
- Accountability
- Communication
- (and 8 more)
-
Content ArticleProfessor Anne Marie Rafferty, Royal College of Nursing (RCN) President, has been involved in two decades of vital nursing workforce research. She explains in this interview for the RCN how the evidence could help us achieve safe staffing.
- Posted
-
- Nurse
- Staff factors
- (and 7 more)
-
Content ArticleEveryone should be treated with dignity and respect at work. Bullying and harassment is unacceptable and constitutes a violation of human and legal rights that can lead to criminal prosecution and civil law claims. Employers have a duty of care to provide a safe and healthy working environment for their staff, and this is an implied term of every contract of employment. Bullying and harassment undermines physical and mental health, frequently resulting in poor work performance. Possible consequences include: insomnia and inability to relax loss of confidence and self-doubt loss of appetite hypervigilance and excessive double-checking of all actions inability to switch off from work.
-
Content Article"It’s time to halt, take a break, and redraw the relationship between patient care and self-care. Self-care isn’t an optional luxury. It must sit at the heart of what we do, to ensure our teams can continue to rise to the challenges of working in the 21st century NHS, to give our patients the best of both ourselves, and the organisation so many of us are proud to be a part of."
- Posted
-
- Accident and Emergency
- Ambulance
-
(and 30 more)
Tagged with:
- Accident and Emergency
- Ambulance
- Care home
- Community care facility
- HDU / ICU
- Prison
- Operating theatre / recovery
- Mental health unit
- Hospital ward
- AHP
- Anaesthetist
- Care home staff
- Carer
- Doctor
- Nurse
- Paramedic
- Surgeon
- Social care staff
- Radiologist
- Physiotherapist
- Pharmacist
- Health and safety
- Fatigue / exhaustion
- Resilience
- Motivation
- Organisational culture
- Workforce management
- Process redesign
- Time management
- Case report
- Link analysis
- Workload analysis
-
Content ArticleSleep is fundamental to good health. Healthcare professionals receive little teaching on the importance of sleep, particularly with respect to their own health when working night shifts. Knowledge of basic sleep physiology, together with simple strategies to improve core sleep and the ability to cope with working nights, can result in significant improvements both for healthcare professionals and for the patients they care for. This article by Dr Mike Farquhar, published in the Archives of Disease in Childhood: Education & Practice, gives practical advice for night shift workers and, generally, how to improve your quality of sleep.
- Posted
-
- Doctor
- Fatigue / exhaustion
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Community Post
Leadership under Pressure
Ben Tipney posted a topic in Doctors
- Leadership
- Team culture
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
Here's a recent interesting blog post on leadership under pressure https://www.med-led.co.uk/2019/08/19/under-pressure/- Posted
-
1
-
- Leadership
- Team culture
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Content ArticleThis project is led by the Department of Anaesthesia at Newcastle upon Tyne NHS Foundation Trust, in partnership with Northumbria University Newcastle. The aim is to co-design a fatigue risk management strategy at the Trust to help teams effectively manage night shift fatigue.
- Posted
-
- Hospital ward
- AHP
- (and 11 more)
-
Content ArticleDesigned and tested by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's (IHI) world-renowned safety experts, this toolkit includes documents on improving teamwork and communication, tools to help you understand the underlying issues that can cause errors, and valuable guidance about how to create and maintain reliable systems. Each of the nine tools includes a short description, instructions, an example and a blank template.
- Posted
-
- Communication problems
- Decision making
- (and 7 more)
-
Content ArticleFollowing the investigation into the Mid Staffordshire Hospital (United Kingdom) and the subsequent Francis reports (2013 and 2015), all healthcare staff, including students, are called upon to raise concerns if they are concerned about patient safety. Despite this advice, it is evident that some individuals are reluctant to do so and the reasons for this are not always well understood. This research study from Fisher and Kiernan, published in Nurse Education Today, provides an insight into the factors that influence student nurses to speak up or remain silent when witnessing sub-optimal care.
- Posted
-
- Nurse
- Communication
- (and 5 more)
-
Content ArticleEmpowering doctors to speak up when they have concerns is essential to making our NHS safer, say Peter Brennan and Mike Davidson in this BMJ article. They discuss how healthcare can learn a lot from aviation and other high risk organisations, particularly in how they’ve embraced and applied human factors, the importance of looking after ourselves at work, and reducing hierarchy.
- Posted
-
- Doctor
- Accountability
- (and 7 more)
-
Content ArticleThe NHS Innovation Accelerator supports the uptake and spread of high impact, evidence-based innovations across England’s NHS, benefiting patients, populations and NHS staff.
- Posted
-
- Communication
- Leadership
-
(and 5 more)
Tagged with: