Search the hub
Showing results for tags 'Restorative Justice'.
-
Content ArticleA video of the recent Harmed Patients Alliance webinar on restorative healing after healthcare harm.
- Posted
-
- Harmed Care Pathway
- Restorative Justice
- (and 1 more)
-
Content ArticleRestorative justice is an approach that aims to replace hurt by healing in the understanding that the perpetrators of pain are also victims of the incident themselves. In 2016, Mersey Care, an NHS community and mental health trust in the Liverpool region, implemented restorative justice (or what it termed a 'Just and Learning Culture') to fundamentally change its responses to incidents, patient harm, and complaints against staff. This study highlights the qualitative benefits from this implementation and also identifies the economic effects of restorative justice.
- Posted
-
- Patient harmed
- Patient engagement
- (and 3 more)
-
Content ArticleIn healthcare systems safety needs to be conceived in a relational as well as a regulatory framework, with resilience being understood as the interplay between both elements. This presentation from the Australian Institute of Health Innovation, critically appraises how harm is understood and responded to within the New Zealand health system and the potential contribution of restorative responses. A major and internationally unprecedented project, that employed a restorative approach to address the harm caused to patients and professionals by the use of surgical mesh in New Zealand (NZ), is used to illustrate the case for change.
- Posted
-
- Investigation
- Safety culture
- (and 4 more)
-
Content Article
Why should health agencies refer to restorative justice?
Claire Cox posted an article in Second victim
‘Victim wellbeing’ is a phrase often linked to restorative justice, but what does that look like in practice? In this article, Greg Smith (restorative justice development manager at Thames Valley Restorative Justice Service (TVRJS)), Diana Batchelor (PhD researcher at Oxford University and independent evaluation researcher for TVRJS) and Becci Seaborne (assistant director for restorative justice at TVRJS) consider why, and how, restorative justice could become a default option for health service providers.- Posted
-
- Patient harmed
- Staff safety
- (and 5 more)
-
Content Article
What is restorative justice?
Claire Cox posted an article in Harmed care patient pathways/post-incident pathways
Restorative justice brings those harmed by crime or conflict and those responsible for the harm into communication, enabling everyone affected by a particular incident to play a part in repairing the harm and finding a positive way forward. This is part of a wider field called restorative practice. Restorative practice can be used anywhere to prevent conflict, build relationships and repair harm by enabling people to communicate effectively and positively. Restorative practice is increasingly being used in schools, children’s services, workplaces, hospitals, communities and the criminal justice system. Could this be something that we could utilise as a new approach in healthcare?- Posted
-
- Patient harmed
- Patient
- (and 4 more)
-
Content ArticleThis report summarises the themes that emerged from a restorative process to hear from New Zealand men and women affected by surgical mesh. Restorative justice approaches and practices were used to respond to harm from surgical mesh. This innovation differs to medicolegal action and inquiry approaches in other countries. A restorative approach intended to create a safe space to explore multiple experiences and perspectives of harm.
- Posted
-
- System safety
- Safety II
- (and 4 more)
-
Content ArticleRestorative Just Culture aims to repair trust and relationships damaged after an incident. It allows all parties to discuss how they have been affected, and collaboratively decide what should be done to repair the harm.
- Posted
-
- Just Culture
- Communication
- (and 5 more)