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Showing results for tags 'Safety II'.
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Content ArticleThis info-graphic by the Faculty of Pain Medicine is a safety checklist for Interventional Pain Procedures under local anaesthesia or sedation. This has been adapted from the World Health Organization surgical checklist.
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Podcast: Incident reporting
PatientSafetyLearning Team posted an article in Good practice
Richard Smith is a trained paramedic who now works as Head of Quality and Safety at Addenbrooks Hospital. In this interview with East England Ambulance Service General Broadcast, Richard talks about his recent paper on incident reporting in the ambulance service. He asks if we have a blame and fear-free culture when concerns are raised, the value of feedback and highlights the importance of reporting the positive incidents too.- Posted
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- Just Culture
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What’s the plan?
Eve Mitchell posted an article in Exit strategies
In her latest blog for the hub, topic lead Eve Mitchell discusses what we need to do as we plan for recovery post-covid. Despite an apparent increase in interest in joining the nursing profession since the start of the pandemic, the reported 40,000 gap in nursing numbers is not going to be closed overnight and we therefore need to plan for different, re-think roles and responsibilities, and capture and capitalise on the innovations that have flourished in some areas. As we begin to reorient, revise our goals and focus on moving beyond rather than on just ‘getting by’, it is important that we look at all settings of care so we can learn from excellence, build on the best and support a faster response in the future if required. -
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Dirty Dozen and COVID-19 (webinar, May 2020)
Claire Cox posted an article in Coronavirus (COVID-19)
There are fears around maintaining personal safety whilst ensuring patient safety. Staff need to protect both themselves and their families at home. Equally, it is essential that staff feel supported in identifying risks and the potential for errors with a robust mechanism in place to reduce, eliminate or mitigate such risks. The Human Factors 'Dirty Dozen' is a concept developed by Gordon DuPont. He described elements that can act as precursors to accidents or incidents, or influence people to make mistakes. This webinar, from the Clinical Excellence Commission, looks at ways you can identify risks or 'hot spots' in your area of work and then discuss with your team at handover and huddles and plan strategies to reduce, eliminate or mitigate the risks- Posted
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Content ArticleSpeaking at the Domain Driven Design conference in 2018, Sidney Dekker talks about the complexity of pursuing and averting drift into failure.
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Safety-II in practice (June 2017)
Claire Cox posted an article in Recommended books and literature
Safety-I is defined as the freedom from unacceptable harm. The purpose of traditional safety management is therefore to find ways to ensure this ‘freedom’. But as socio-technical systems steadily have become larger and less tractable, this has become harder to do. Resilience engineering pointed out from the very beginning that resilient performance – an organisation’s ability to function as required under expected and unexpected conditions alike – required more than the prevention of incidents and accidents. This developed into a new interpretation of safety (Safety-II) and consequently a new form of safety management. Safety-II changes safety management from protective safety and a focus on how things can go wrong, to productive safety and a focus on how things can and do go well. For Safety-II, the aim is not just the elimination of hazards and the prevention of failures and malfunctions but also how best to develop an organisation’s potentials for resilient performance – the way it responds, monitors, learns, and anticipates. That requires models and methods that go beyond the Safety-I toolbox. This book introduces a comprehensive approach for the management of Safety-II, called the Resilience Assessment Grid (RAG). It explains the principles of the RAG and how it can be used to develop the resilience potentials. The RAG provides four sets of diagnostic and formative questions that can be tailored to any organisation. The questions are based on the principles of resilience engineering and backed by practical experience from several domains. Safety-II in Practice is for both the safety professional and academic reader. For the professional, it presents a workable method (RAG) for the management of Safety-II, with a proven track record. For academic and student readers, the book is a concise and practical presentation of resilience engineering.- Posted
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Learning from Excellence
Claire Cox posted an article in Implementation of improvements
Emma Plunkett, Consultant Anaesthetist and Adrian Plunkett, Paediatric Incentivist, talk about what inspired them to establish the Learning from Excellence approach to patient safety and care, how it has made an impact in the West Midlands and why it won a coveted HSJ Patient Safety Award.- Posted
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- Leadership style
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Content ArticleThe CARe QI handbook is based on research in a range of healthcare organisations and settings, including acute care, primary care, care homes, oral health and community settings. It was designed to provide practical tools to apply ideas from resilient healthcare to quality improvement.
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Content ArticleOn Thursday 28 April, Q’s Organisational Resilience & Safety-II group organised a special zoom session to explore how practice is changing in the light of our COVID-19 response. Follow a virtual meeting discussing Safety-II in action during COVID-19, hosts Simon Gill, Suzette Woodward and Paul Stretton share a summary of insights from the session.
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Content ArticleThe purpose of this guide from NHS Education for Scotland is to help people working in the health and social care ecosystem capture valuable practice and improvements made during their response to COVID-19. The aim is to contribute to organisational change at a policy, strategic and operational level. If left too late, there is a real danger that positive change is not documented and will be lost as the health system emerges from the pandemic.