Search the hub
Showing results for tags 'Training'.
-
Content ArticleA guide supporting clinical, patient experience and quality teams to draw on patient experience data to improve quality in healthcare.
- Posted
-
- Patient
- Transformation
- (and 4 more)
-
Content ArticleSee the South West Academic Health Science Network's video from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Patient Safety Officer Training. This training was held over a week for clinical and non clinical staff to understand patient safety and what role they can play.
- Posted
-
- Feedback
- Safety management
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Content Article
Safety, Skills and Improvement: Patient Safety Zone
Claire Cox posted an article in NHS Scotland
NHS Education for Scotland's multi-disciplinary information and resources to help you understand more about patient safety and your contribution to making care safer.- Posted
-
1
-
- Training
- Patient safety strategy
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
Content Article
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures
Claire Cox posted an article in Doctors
The Surgical Grand Rounds, hosted by the Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences, are the key educational meetings for consultants, juniors and medical students. Presentations revolve around clinical cases and are followed by lively, educational discussion. These podcasts are brought to you by the Oxford University Medical Education Fellows. -
Content ArticlePatient Safety Learning speaks to Ben Tipney, Managing Director of MedLed and the hub topic lead in Human Factors, about how healthcare can achieve high performance and learn from other industries, including from the sports industry.
- Posted
-
2
-
- Communication problems
- Work / environment factors
- (and 5 more)
-
Content ArticleThe Patient Safety Launch Pad training programme aims to improve patient safety skills in hospitals, GP practices, community services and mental health and care organisations in the region. It was hosted by the South West Academic Health Science Network and Patient Safety Collaborative, sponsored by NHS Improvement, and delivered through regional and national experts in patient safety and quality improvement. In this short video, patient safety leads and those working in healthcare discuss the success of the programme.
- Posted
-
- Accountability
- Communication
- (and 6 more)
-
Content ArticleNHS Improvement have published a number of case studies on appropriate use of clinical risk assessment tools, developing new evidence-based alerting systems and developing personalised risk management plans for people who use services, to manage risks positively.
- Posted
-
- Hospital ward
- Doctor
- (and 13 more)
-
Content ArticleThis study from Landefeld et al., published in the Indian Journal of Community Medicine, looks at the perceptions of healthcare providers about barriers to improved patient safety in the Indian state of Kerala. Five focus group discussions were held with 16 doctors and 20 nurses across three institutions (primary, secondary and tertiary care centers) in Kerala, India and transcripts were analysed by thematic analysis.
- Posted
-
- Patient factors
- Training
-
(and 4 more)
Tagged with:
-
Community PostI met at a recent conference a newly appointed Patient Safety Manager. She’d been working in a supporting role in another organisation and was delighted with her obviously well deserved promotion to a more senior role of patient safety manager in another Trust. But 6 days in, she’s had no induction, there is no patient safety strategy or plan in the Trust, there isn’t any guidance as how she should do her job other than just ‘get on with doing RCAs. ‘ She doesn’t know who she can turn to for advice or support either in her Trust or elsewhere. Are there networks of PSMs she can turn to? Surely there is a model framework for patient safety that is produced as a guide? How can we help her and other PSMs?
- Posted
- 8 replies
-
1
-
- Patient safety / risk management leads
- Training
- (and 3 more)
-
Content ArticleDespite 20 years of effort, every year avoidable unsafe care still leads tens of thousands of patients to suffer death or serious, life-changing harm. A Blueprint for Action, a report from Patient Safety Learning, furthers the analysis of the systemic causes of this harm and describes actions to make patient care safer. Last September, health and patient safety professionals and patients overwhelmingly welcomed the analysis of avoidable unsafe care offered in Patient Safety Learning’s Green Paper, A Patient-Safe Future. Matt Hancock, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care described it as “…the blueprint for action that we need.” Following widespread consultation on the Green Paper, A Blueprint for Action extends this analysis to identify actions to address the systemic causes of unsafe care.
- Posted
-
4
-
- Leadership
- Just Culture
- (and 4 more)
-
Content ArticleThe Parliamentary Healthcare Service Ombudsman published 'Ignoring the alarms: How NHS eating disorder services are failing patients' in December 2017. The families who brought forward their complaints helped uncover serious issues that required national attention. The failings catalogued in the report highlighted a systemic set of problems in relation to identifying, treating and monitoring eating disorders that require a systemic response. This encompasses raising awareness among clinicians, building greater specialist capability and ensuring adult eating disorder services achieve parity with child and adolescent services. This submission provides an overview of the report’s systemic findings and the responses seen to the systemic recommendations made to date.
- Posted
-
- Recommendations
- Investigation
- (and 4 more)
-
Content ArticleThis pack is for acute, specialist, mental health and community trust boards and specifically trust non-executive directors (NEDs) and non-clinical executive directors. It explains what boards are expected to do in relation to the Learning from Deaths framework.
- Posted
-
- Patient death
- Organisational learning
- (and 3 more)
-
Content ArticleIn this series 'e-Patient Dave' deBronkart shares what we all need to know to get the best medical care without going broke or getting killed in the process. An 'e-patient' is someone who is empowered, engaged, equipped, and able, who never expected the system to do everything but thinks and acts like a responsible independent person.
- Posted
-
- Patient
- Knowledge issue
- (and 5 more)
-
Content ArticleThis guide, by NHS Improvement, contains key questions for chairs, chief executives and senior leaders about common barriers to clinicians taking part in senior organisational management. It addresses the NHS Long Term Plan priority around nurturing the next generation of leaders and supporting all those with the capability and ambition to reach the most senior levels of the service. It was developed in response to the 2018 recommendations to the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care to ensure more clinicians from all professional backgrounds take on strategic leadership roles.
- Posted
-
- Leadership
- Teamwork
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Content ArticleThis National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) guide provides a detailed illustration of how principles of safe design can be applied to widely used medical technologies. It focuses on the design of electronic infusion devices, such as infusion pumps and syringe drivers. There a wide variety of infusion device designs in use in healthcare. This document provides practical guidance and examples of best practice in the design of infusion devices, as well as a guide for those involved in the purchase and procurement of these devices.
- Posted
-
- Safety management
- Medical device
- (and 5 more)
-
Content Article
Building leadership for inclusion narrative 2019
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Boards
Inclusion is core to the NHS Constitution, yet it remains one of the biggest challenges that health systems face globally, nationally and systemically. In the face of a growing body of evidence, which demonstrates the critical role that inclusive leadership plays in ensuring that health and care systems operate most effectively for patients and public, it is incumbent upon us to ensure that leaders at all levels are equipped and capable of leading inclusively and effectively.- Posted
-
- Leadership style
- Safety culture
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Content ArticleThis video form Trent Hospital shows how using human factors can improve patient outcomes and how things go wrong in healthcare. Can you spot how systems and protocols could be changed here?
- Posted
-
- Training
- Workforce management
- (and 3 more)
-
Content ArticleNikki Davey, Clinical Human Factors Group Trustee, talks about how we might measure if a human factors intervention has been implemented on an operational basis.
-
Content ArticleInterview on 'This Morning' with Dr Chris Steele discussing the signs and symptoms of sepsis.
- Posted
-
- Service user
- Patient
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Content ArticleThe Manchester Patient Safety Framework (MaPSaF) is a tool to help healthcare teams and organisations assess their progress in developing a safety culture. It has been adapted for different healthcare teams including, but not limited to; mental health, ambulance and primary care. Assessment is carried out in workshops, led by a facilitator from the healthcare organisation.
- Posted
-
1
-
- Training
- Team culture
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Content Article
Making schools safer project
Claire Cox posted an article in Allergies
The Anaphylaxis Campaign is the only UK wide charity solely focused on supporting people at risk of severe allergic reactions.- Posted
-
- Teacher / lecturer
- Training
- (and 4 more)
-
Content Article
Patient safety: this is public health (2014)
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Improving patient safety
Avoidable patient harm is a major public health concern. While the public health community has contributed much to one aspect of patient harm prevention, infection control, the tools and techniques of public health have far more to offer to the emerging field of patient safety science. Patient safety practice has become increasingly professionalised in recent years, but specialist degree programmes in the field remain scarce. Healthcare organisations should consider graduate training in public health as an avenue for investing in the professional development of patient safety practitioners, and schools and programs of public health should support further research and teaching to support patient safety improvement. Alan J Card discusses this further in his article in the Journal of Healthcare Risk Management.- Posted
-
- Training
- Public health
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with: