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Showing results for tags 'Team culture'.
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Content ArticleIn this blog for the Nursing Times, Fiona Hibberts, head of the Nightingale Academy and consultant nurse at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, discusses the importance of huddles in improving patient safety and care, and in providing emotional support for staff. The author describes a huddle as "a gathering of key individuals, at a given time, to briefly discuss safety aspects of care of a group of patients in real time, escalate concerns and make plans," and highlights their importance for staff morale during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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- Staff engagement
- Communication
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Content ArticleA Patient Safety Huddle is a brief multidisciplinary daily meeting held to discuss threats to patient safety and actions to mitigate risk. This evaluation of The Huddle Up for Safer Healthcare (HUSH) project in BMC Health Services Research aims to assess the impact on teamwork and safety culture of the project, which implemented PSHs in 92 wards at five hospitals, across three NHS Trusts. This paper also seeks to add to the evidence-base around huddles as a mechanism for improving safety.
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- Team culture
- Team leadership
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Content ArticleThis article in Patient Safety looks at a new approach to identifying and monitoring patients with sepsis developed by a team of nurses at WellSpan Health in the USA. The Central Alert Team (CAT) works remotely, looking for indicators of sepsis in patient charts and vital signs. They relay information and treatment advice to nurses working at the bedside and take an adaptive approach to find the best ways of working. This focused approach means the CAT nurses are able to quickly identify patients who are deteriorating and ensure treatment is administered at the right time.
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Content ArticleThis article in The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety reports on the findings of a pilot programme to improve healthcare staff wellbeing. Between November 2018 and May 2020, researchers engaged five healthcare sites to take part in a pilot intervention. The pilot used evidence-based approaches to wellbeing including a comprehensive culture assessment, redesigning daily workflow and leadership and team development. The researchers found that healthcare worker wellbeing improved when: an integrated, skills-based approach was taken there was a focus on team culture, interactions and leadership workflows were redesigned to promote positive emotions. This study suggests that combining a number of these approaches at the same time can improve healthcare working environments and reduce levels of staff burnout.
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- Staff support
- Staff safety
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Content Article
Swimming with the tide, a blog by Sally Howard
Sally Howard posted an article in Leadership for patient safety
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- Staff support
- Pandemic
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Content ArticleThe aim of this qualitative study, published in Midwifery, was to examine how (UK and Australian based) midwifery students, who self-identify as having been bullied, perceive the repercussions on women and their families.
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- Obstetrics and gynaecology/ Maternity
- Team culture
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Content Article
Humanising the 'machinery' of care (March 2019)
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Good practice
Charlie Jones and Martin Seager outline ways in which healthcare staff can be more open to spontaneity and connection, and explain why it matters.- Posted
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- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleVariation in healthcare processes is widespread in mental health care and can lead to inefficient processes and unnecessarily long inpatient stays. This study in The British Journal of Healthcare Management aimed to identify sources of variation and introduce a huddle intervention to increase system efficiency on a psychiatric inpatient ward in London. The study found that huddles are a useful way to improve staff communication and increase ward efficiency without taking up a significant amount of clinicians' time.
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- Teamwork
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Content ArticleThis rapid review from the BC Patient Safety & Quality Council provides an overview of the role of culture in healthcare settings, including the common limitations and best practices related to the measurement of culture. The review also highlights selected survey instruments, including a description of what is measured by each survey and their relative strengths. No one survey instrument is identified as the gold standard to measure culture in a health care setting. This literature review offers guidance and supports the use of survey tools to generate discussion, provide data for comparison and foster improvement to culture within organisations.
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Content ArticleIn this blog for medical education website Intensive, Chris Nickson shares advice on running a 'hot debrief' after a critical incident. A hot debrief is a short conversation that allows staff involved in an incident to gather as a team and share their perspectives and concerns, as well as coming up with ways to prevent similar incidents happening again. This blog details practical methods for planning, facilitating and concluding a hot debrief and provides resources for further reading.
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- Staff support
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Content Article
Evaluation of huddles: a multisite study (1 July 2017)
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Techniques
This article in The Health Care Manager examines the value of 'huddles' - regular, interdisciplinary group meetings - in improving communication among disciplines, resolving problems and sharing information. The authors found that the primary function of huddles was the exchange of information that posed or had the potential to pose safety risks to patients. Staff reported that huddles were useful in improving awareness of safety concerns and also improved communication between disciplines.- Posted
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- Communication
- Information sharing
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Content ArticleEffective communication is critical for patient safety. One potential threat to communication in the operating room is incivility. Although examined in other industries, little has been done to examine how incivility impacts the ability to deliver safe care in a crisis. Katz et al. sought to determine how incivility influenced anaesthesiology resident performance during a standardised simulation scenario of occult haemorrhage.
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- Surgery - General
- Operating theatre / recovery
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News Article
Hospital operating theatres plagued by racist, sexist and homophobic abuse
Patient Safety Learning posted a news article in News
Racism, sexism, and homophobia is widespread in hospital operating theatres across England, according to an independent report. In a damning verdict on the atmosphere in some surgical teams, Baroness Helena Kennedy QC said the ‘old boys’ network of alpha male surgeons was preventing some doctors from rising to the top and had fuelled an oppressive environment for women, ethnic minorities and trainee surgeons. The report was commissioned by the Royal College of Surgeons and lays bare the "discrimination and unacceptable behaviour" taking place in some surgical teams. Baroness Kennedy told The Telegraph the field of surgery was "lagging behind" society, adding: "It is driven by an ethos which is very much alpha male, where white female surgeons are often assumed to be nurses and black women surgeons mistaken for the cleaner. And this is by the management. Read full story Source: The Independent, 18 March 2021- Posted
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- Operating theatre / recovery
- Surgeon
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Content ArticleThe Maternal and Neonatal Health Safety Collaborative (MNHSC), is providing each maternal and neonatal service with an opportunity to assess their safety culture as part of the programme of improvement work across England. Organisations within each wave of the collaborative will be given the opportunity to undertake a culture survey, and then a repeat survey after 12-18 months. The culture of an organisation, team and staff attitudes can have a tangible impact on patient safety and outcomes. There is great value in assessing the safety culture; the results can inform the local improvement plans. The organisation will be supported through the process. This document explains more about the SCORE survey, what it measures, and what it means for the team and improvement projects.
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Content Article
Five fundamentals of civility
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Good practice
Graphic showing the five fundamentals of civility.- Posted
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- Staff safety
- Staff support
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Content ArticleIncivility in the healthcare system can have an enormous negative impact and consequences. In contrast, civil behaviour promotes positive social interactions and effective workplace functioning. This article focuses on the first two fundamentals of the five fundamentals of civility: respect and self-awareness.
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- Organisational culture
- Team culture
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Content Article
Why isn’t After Action Review used more widely in the NHS?
Judy Walker posted an article in Barriers
After Action Review (AAR) is a tried and tested, evidence-based approach that increases learning after events but, despite the clear benefits to patient safety and team resilience, its use in the NHS is still more limited than it should be. Judy Walker explains three of the barriers seen in clinical settings.- Posted
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- After action review
- Organisational learning
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Content ArticlePresentation from Terry Wilcutt Chief, Safety and Mission Assurance, and Hal Bell Deputy Chief, Safety and Mission Assurance at NASA.
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- Organisational culture
- Leadership
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Content ArticleThis blog by consultancy firm Gallup highlights seven questions leaders should ask to about their huddles, to ensure they are effective in improving patient safety and preventing staff burnout.
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- Fatigue / exhaustion
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Content ArticleThis case study looks at how implementing a daily emergency call safety huddle at Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust has increased efficiency in team working and improved patient safety. A safety huddle is a short multidisciplinary briefing, held at a predictable time and place, and focused on the patients most at risk. By implementing the ten-minute daily safety huddle, the medical emergency and cardiac arrest teams improved patient outcomes and staff experience, and were able to make better use of resources.
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- Teamwork
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EventThe New Existence Webinar Series will take an in-depth look at The New Existence framework from The Beryl Institute. Helping to link core ideas and apply practices, each session in the series will focus on a key aim and corresponding actions of The New Existence. This webinar series will help to explore how lead together into the future of healthcare. The full webinar series is listed below. Webinars are scheduled from 2:00-3:00pm ET/1:00-2:00pm CT. Participants are not required to attend each webinar in the series. Click on a title below to register for the individual webinars in the series. Care teams Redefine and advance the integrated nature of and critical role patients and their circle of support play on care teams. January 28: Redefine the care team February 25: Invite and activate partnership March 25: Commit to care team well-being Governance & leadership Reimagine, redefine and reshape the essential role of leadership in driving systematic change. April 22: Create transparency across the healthcare ecosystem May 27: Restore and nurture confidence June 24: Transform healthcare in collaboration with diverse voices Models of care & operations Co-design systems, processes and behaviors to deliver the best human experience. July 22: Co-design intentional, innovative and collaborative systems August 26: Innovate processes of care to transform behavior Policy & systemic issues Advocate for equitable institutional, governmental and payor policies, incentives and funding to drive positive change. September 23: Hardwire human partnership in the healthcare ecosystem October 28: Research, measure and dismantle the structures and systems that lead to disparities November 23: Modernise the surveys and democratise the data
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- Innovation
- Team leadership
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Content ArticleThis study in BMJ Open considers how the usefulness of internal whistleblowing is affected by other institutional processes in healthcare organisations. The authors examine how the effectiveness of formal inquiries (in response to employees raising concerns) affects the utility of whistleblowing. The study used computer simulations to test the utility of several whistleblowing policies in a variety of organisational contexts. This study found that: organisational inefficiencies can have a negative impact on the benefits of speaking up about poor patient care where resources are limited and reviews less efficient, it can actually improve patient care if whistleblowing rates are limited including 'softer' mechanisms for reporting concerns (for example, peer to peer conversation) alongside whistleblowing policies, can overcome these organisational limitations.
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- Whistleblowing
- Communication
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Content Article
Quality improvement from the dining room table
Claire Cox posted an article in Blogs and vlogs
Since her last blog for the hub, Claire has moved away from clinical practice as a critical care outreach nurse and has entered the world of patient safety management in a new Trust. Coming out of a second lockdown, Claire reflects on how her experiences working in the NHS are very different from the first lockdown back in March 2020 and the difficulties she's facing doing quality improvement from home.- Posted
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- Quality improvement
- Training
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Content ArticleA concept called “psychological safety” is especially crucial to a team’s success, according to Amy Edmondson, professor of leadership and management at the Harvard Business School. Psychological safety describes “a workplace where one feels that one’s voice is welcome with bad news, questions, concerns, half-baked ideas and even mistakes,” Edmondson tells CNBC Make It. People should feel like they can ask questions, raise concerns and pitch ideas without undue repercussions. This article gives a good introduction to what psychological safety is and how to achieve it in the work place.
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- Psychological safety
- Just Culture
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News ArticleAn Essex maternity department has been served with further warnings by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) and again rated “inadequate”. Serious concerns were raised about the services at Basildon University Hospital in the summer, after several babies were found to have been starved of oxygen and put at risk of permanent brain damage. Despite the CQC issuing warning notices to Mid and South Essex Foundation Trust in June 2020, a subsequent visit on 18 September found multiple problems had persisted. The CQC’s findings at Basildon included: the service was short-staffed and concerns were not escalated appropriately multidisciplinary team working was “dysfunctional”, which sometimes led to safety incidents doctors, midwives and other professionals did not support each other to provide good care. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 19 November 2020
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- Maternity
- Patient safety incident
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