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Showing results for tags 'Teamwork'.
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Content ArticleThis study in Risk Management and Healthcare Policy aimed to explore healthcare workers’ perceptions of patient safety culture at primary healthcare centres in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, and the factors that influence them. It also aimed to identify the challenges of adopting patient safety culture in these centres. The study findings highlight a number of areas for improvement, particularly in relation to event reporting, non-punitive responses, and openness in communication. The authors highlight that error reporting should not just be considered a means of learning from mistakes, but should also be considered the first step towards preventing injury and improving patient safety. They highlight the need to eliminate three crucial elements associated with errors - blame, fear, and silence - in order to build a safety culture.
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Content ArticleThis article, published in BMJ Quality and Safety, examines the relationships between non-routine events, teamwork and patient outcomes in paediatric cardiac surgery. Structured observation of effective teamwork in the operating room can identify deficiencies in the system and conduct of procedures, even in otherwise successful operations. High performing teams are more resilient, displaying effective teamwork when operations become more difficult.
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- Surgery - Paediatric
- Surgery - Cardiothoracic
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Content ArticleThe aim of this study, published in BMJ Quality and Safety, was to assess the role of intraoperative non-routine events and team performance on paediatric cardiac surgery outcomes. It focuses on improving methods for studying teamwork.
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- Surgery - Cardiothoracic
- Teamwork
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Content ArticleThis article, published in The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety, discusses the role of teamwork in the professional education of physicians. The Institute of Medicine (IOM) has recommended that organisations establish interdisciplinary team training programs that incorporate proven methods for team management. Teamwork can be assessed during physician medical education, board certification, licensure and continuing practice. Team members must possess specific knowledge, skills and attitudes (KSAs), such as the ability to exchange information, which enable individual team members to coordinate.
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Event
How to deal with difficult people
Sam posted an event in Community Calendar
This one day virtual masterclass facilitated by Mr Perbinder Grewal, will focus on how to deal with difficult people. Do you have someone at work who consistently triggers you? Doesn’t listen? Takes credit for work you’ve done? Wastes your time with trivial issues? Acts like a know-it-all? Can only talk about themselves? Constantly criticises? We will discuss strategies and tools to improve communication and interactions with others. For further information and to book your place visit https://www.healthcareconferencesuk.co.uk/conferences-masterclasses/how-to-deal-with-difficult-people or email aman@hc-uk.org.uk. hub members receive a 20% discount. Email info@pslhub.org for discount code.- Posted
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- Personal development
- Communication
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EventDifficult conversations - Thursday 2nd February 2023 Difficult people - Tuesday 7th February 2023 Conflict management - Wednesday 15th February 2023 This 3 day intensive training course will provide an effective guide to improving your communication skills. With each day focusing on difficult conversations, managing difficult people, and conflict and conflict resolution the course will empower you with the skills to deal with difficult issues and difficult situations within your everyday practice. Day 1 - how to deal with and manage difficult conversations. With a focus on telephone and virtual consultations with patients this masterclass focuses on dealing with difficult conversations, The event will focus on speaking to patients in distress, understanding where patient safety issues arise, and managing unhappy patients and complaints. It will discuss strategies and tools to improve communication and interactions. Day 2 - how to with difficult people. Do you have someone at work who consistently triggers you? Doesn’t listen? Takes credit for work you’ve done? Wastes your time with trivial issues? Acts like a know-it-all? Can only talk about themselves? Constantly criticises? It will discuss strategies and tools to improve communication and interactions with others. Day 3 - conflict from how to manage different types of conflict through to conflict resolution This course is aimed at all healthcare staff from frontline staff through to senior managers in dealing with conflict with colleagues, staff, clients and patients. Further information and registration
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- Communication
- Confidence
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Event
Red Teams to improve patient safety
Patient Safety Learning posted an event in Community Calendar
The new NHS Patient Safety Syllabus has brought education and training to the fore to push patient safety in healthcare. Based on the syllabus this masterclass will focus on how Human Factors and Red Teams can be improve Patient Safety. Red Teams are defined as a team that is formed with the objective of subjecting an organisation’s plans, programmes, ideas and assumptions to rigorous analysis and challenge. We will look at the use of Red Teaming taken from the Ministry of Defence for supporting staff and teams faced with different problems and challenges in healthcare. For further information and to book your place visit www.healthcareconferencesuk.co.uk/conferences-masterclasses/red-teams-patient-safety or email kerry@hc-uk.org.uk hub members can receive a 20% discount. Email info@pslhub.org for discount code.- Posted
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- Training
- Human factors
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Content Article
How to influence without authority
Patient_Safety_Learning posted an article in Leadership for patient safety
This article by Jesse Lyn Stoner, argues that leading without relying on authority is a higher evolutionary skill. It supports developing adult relationships based on mutual objectives and creates work environments grounded in respect for human dignity. Stoner outlines “The 8 Portals of Influence” – Ways to Influence Without Authority.- Posted
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- Leadership
- Teamwork
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Content Article
Chris Turner: When rudeness in teams turns deadly (TEDx, 2019)
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Culture
How we treat each other at work has an enormous impact on how teams perform—with potentially fatal consequences if you work in healthcare. Chris Turner, consultant in emergency medicine and founder of Civility Saves Lives, reveals the shocking impact of rudeness in the workplace. He highlights the importance of understanding the complex realities of practice and communication between healthcare professionals in different team environments, if we are to learn from patient safety incidents.- Posted
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- Organisational culture
- Civility
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Content ArticleIn this blog, Patient Safety Learning's Content and Engagement Manager, Stephanie O'Donohue highlights some of the common barriers to collaborating for safety. She argues that we need time and space to listen and build trust between different groups if we are to really harness the power of collective insight and make safety improvements.
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- Patient engagement
- Staff engagement
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Community Post
Who should investigate?
Patient Safety Learning posted a topic in Investigations and complaints
- Investigation
- Contributing factor
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Great blog in Learn from Martin on who should be in an investigation team - the expertise of the team, their roles and responsibilities. Do you agree?- Posted
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- Investigation
- Contributing factor
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Community Post
CCG Patient Safety Managers
- Team leadership
- Safety management
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Talking with John Holt, PS Mnager at Birmingham and Solihull CCG today. Would it be helpful to set up a CCG PS Mansger community?- Posted
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- Team leadership
- Safety management
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Community Post
Leadership under Pressure
Ben Tipney posted a topic in Doctors
- Leadership
- Team culture
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Here's a recent interesting blog post on leadership under pressure https://www.med-led.co.uk/2019/08/19/under-pressure/- Posted
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- Leadership
- Team culture
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Community Post
Teaching RCAs to teams: a checklist
lzipperer posted a topic in Investigations, risk management and legal issues
- Root cause analysis
- Training
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Root case analysis has its detractors but can still bring value to understanding deep-seated problems that affect the safety of care. Does anyone have a checklist of elements of an effective TRAINING strategy to bring staff on board with the process? Not how to do an RCA, but to bring a team to the skill competencies they need to do RCA? I'd appreciate hearing your experiences. Please tell your tales!- Posted
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- Root cause analysis
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Content Article
AHRQ: Team STEPPS
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in How to engage for patient safety
AHRQ's TeamSTEPPS - Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety - is an evidence-based set of teamwork tools, aimed at optimising patient outcomes by improving communication and teamwork skills among healthcare teams, including patients and family caregivers.- Posted
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- Patient engagement
- Collaboration
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Content ArticleThis report by Healthcare Inspectorate Wales (HIW) relates to vascular services provided by Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board following the de-escalation of these services as a Service Requiring Significant Improvement (SRSI). The review outlines that while progress has been made against all nine recommendations made by the Royal College of Surgeons, the health board still has improvements to make.
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- Surgery - Vascular
- Wales
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Content Articlehe NHS needs every one of its 1.4 million staff, but nobody is perfect every day of their career. Human factors have a huge impact on staff and patients. After witnessing poor behaviour in the workplace, co-workers are less effective and patients have worse outcomes. An unpleasant working culture also reduces camaraderie in teams and can lead to resignations. This is a vicious cycle of overwork and burnout that the NHS can’t afford. We need to nurture our workforce. In this BMJ opinion article, Scarlett McNally suggests focusing on three areas: expecting a minimum standard of behaviour at all times rather than perfectionism; identifying when intense focus is needed; and building effective teams. The minimum standard should be an expectation of “respect” at all times.
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- Human factors
- Organisational culture
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Content ArticleHospital command and control centres (CCCs) are central locations within a hospital where staff can coordinate and manage the response to emergencies, disasters and other critical events. They are also often used to track and monitor the location and status of hospital staff and resources, such as beds, equipment and supplies, in order to ensure that they are used efficiently and effectively. This blog by Sukhmeet Panesar, Chief Health Officer at Monstar Labs, acts as an introduction to CCCs in healthcare. It includes information on the different types of CCC, the benefits of CCCs and the challenges they may face.
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Event
Human Factors in your work and your team
Patient Safety Learning posted an event in Community Calendar
This virtual masterclass, facilitated by Mr Perbinder Grewal, will guide you in how to use Human Factors in your workplace. All medical and non-medical staff should attend. Leadership in the NHS is the responsibility of all staff. Understanding human factors will allow healthcare to enhance performance, culture and organisation. It can be used to assess why things go wrong and how to implement change to prevent it from happening again or mitigate the risks. Perbinder Grewal is a Consultant Surgeon. He is a human factors and patient safety trainer. He leads on medical education both locally and nationally. He is a Member of the Faculty of Surgical Trainers at the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. He has a passion for training and medical education. He is a Module Tutor for the ChM in Vascular Surgery for the University of Edinburgh and Tutor for the ChM in General Surgery for the past 5 years. He has Postgraduate Certificates in Leadership and Coaching. Register- Posted
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- Human factors
- Organisational culture
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EventuntilThroughout the COVID-19 pandemic health and care staff have been working in different ways and designing new ways to meet the needs of patients and service users, all while under a huge amount of pressure. This event from the King's Fund will take a look at some examples of those changes and how people working in health and care have been working remotely, flexibly and in an agile way to meet the demands created by the pandemic and to develop new and improved ways of working for the future. Sign up now to hear about: the role of visible, collaborative and inclusive leadership to support staff and allow innovation how to keep staff health and wellbeing a priority while also delivering change how teams across health and care were able to be upskilled and remain flexible for these new ways of working. Register
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- Work / environment factors
- Leadership
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Event
Human factors in your work and your team
Patient Safety Learning posted an event in Community Calendar
This virtual masterclass, facilitated by Mr Perbinder Grewal, will guide you in how to use Human Factors in your workplace. All medical and non-medical staff should attend. Leadership in the NHS is the responsibility of all staff. Understanding human factors will allow healthcare to enhance performance, culture and organisation. It can be used to assess why things go wrong and how to implement change to prevent it from happening again or mitigate the risks. Further information and registration or email: kerry@hc-uk.org.uk hub members can receive a 10% discount. Email: info@pslhub.org -
Content ArticleThis is part of our series of Patient Safety Spotlight interviews, where we talk to people working for patient safety about their role and what motivates them. Annie talks to us about her work training teams in safety behaviours, why productivity and safety must go hand-in-hand, and how working on patient safety is like running a marathon.
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- Anaesthetist
- Training
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Content ArticleThe consultancy firm McKinsey & Company explored the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on the nursing workforce in a global survey that included nurses from United States, the United Kingdom, Singapore, Japan, Brazil and France. The survey findings show a consistency around how nurses feel in their roles today, despite the different healthcare systems and delivery networks in each of the six countries. A substantial population of nurses are expressing a desire to leave direct patient care, with between 28% and 38% of nurse respondents in the United States, the United Kingdom, Singapore, Japan and France indicating that they were likely to leave their current role in direct patient care in the next year. This article explores in detail some of the reasons why nurses are choosing to leave direct patient care, and highlights approaches that might encourage retention, including positive leadership initiatives.
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- Nurse
- Workforce management
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Content ArticleHuman error is as old as humankind itself and widely recognised as a significant cause of mistakes. Much of the research in this area has originated from high-risk organisations (HROs), including commercial aviation, where even simple mistakes can be catastrophic. A failure to understand and recognise how Human Factors (HF), especially those that affect performance and team working, can contribute or lead to serious medical error is still widespread across healthcare. Sadly, this commonly occurs in the operating theatre, one of the most dangerous places in hospital. While attitudes and acceptance of pre-surgery briefings has improved using the World Health Service (WHO) Surgical Checklist, this does not address other 'personal' factors that can lead to error, including stress, fatigue, emotional status, hunger and situational awareness. Following initial work around HF perception amongst operating theatre teams, Peter Brennan's (student at the University of Portsmouth) research has lead to significant delivery changes to the high stakes Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons (MRCS) examination, taken by up tp 6,500 junior doctors per year. After recognising boredom and fatigue in examiners, further published studies found an improvement in examiner morale with no significant changes in exam reliability or overall candidate outcome. These changes have improved patient safety at a National level. Other high stakes National Events have been evaluated where repetitive assessment occurs during long days, providing reassurance to organisers and the General Medical Council. 28 HF-related publications have been included in this work, including several reviews of important personal factors that affect performance and how these can be optimised at work.
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- Human factors
- Operating theatre / recovery
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