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Showing results for tags 'User-centred design'.
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Content Article
This article sets out six ways hospitals can ensure patient safety during treatment: Provide Patient Centric Quality Care Design Purpose-Built Hospital Adopt a Health Management System Formulate and Revise Staffing Policies Enforce Safety Protocols Educate the Staff and Patients about Safety Policies- Posted
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Event
UCL: Launch of the Centre for Co-production
Patient Safety Learning posted a calendar event in Community Calendar
untilUCL has been working on developing their Centre for co-production as a mixed group of members of the public, researchers, patients, carers, healthcare practitioners, charities, local authorities and students (really anyone who wants to get involved or is interested in co-production!), since back in October 2017. After almost exactly 3 years they are officially launching it This event will be a celebration of all things co-production, highlighting the importance of this approach to research, policy-making and service development/improvement. It will include short snippets from UCL's ’Share your Co-pro Story’ campaign, the unveiling of their new strategy and new name, logo, and identity, and a chance to meet other likeminded people and have a chat... Find out more and register- Posted
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- User-centred design
- Patient engagement
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Content Article
UK Standards for Public Involvement
Claire Cox posted an article in Patient engagement
The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), Chief Scientist Office (CSO) Scotland, Health and Care Research Wales, and the Public Health Agency Northern Ireland invites people to use the UK Standards for Public Involvement in all types of research activity. People, teams and organisations in health research often ask "What does good public involvement in research look like?". High quality public involvement can make a real difference to research and healthcare; however, it needs to evolve and improve over time. The UK Standards for Public Involvement provide clear, concise statements of effective public involvement against which improvement can be assessed.- Posted
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- Patient engagement
- Standards
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Content Article
and a pioneer in emerging risk.- Posted
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- Latent error
- Omissions
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Content Article
The high complexity model is intended for services that have more complex pathways e.g. chronic (more than one year) services in acute, mental health or community services, where patients may return for several follow up appointments at intervals which may change depending on how their condition progresses. You can use this model to inform decision making and planning, in supporting delivery of timely care to patients. This web page includes the following tools: high complexity model user guidance demand and capacity: high complexity model (blank) demand and capacity: high complexity model (populated).- Posted
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- Care plan
- External factors
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Content Article
The Guide to Improving Patient Safety in Primary Care Settings by Engaging Patients and Families (the Guide) is a resource to help primary care practices partner with patients and their families to improve patient safety. The Guide is composed of materials and resources to help primary care practices implement patient and family engagement to improve patient safety.- Posted
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- Quality improvement
- Patient / family involvement
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Content Article
Assistive technology: definitions, examples and safe use
Claire Cox posted an article in Equipment
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Content Article
Presentations include: Martin Bromiley talking a little about his story and the impact of design, followed by discussion with Francois Jaulin and Frederic Martin from the Anaesthesia Network. Dr Tom Clutton-Brock, Clinical Director of Trauma Management, discussing regulations in design safety and usability. Tracey Herlihey, Head of Safety Intelligence, HSIB, looks at the consequences of bad design. Colette Longstaffe, Product Assurance Specialist, Clinical and Product Assurance, NHS Supply Chain, looks at what the NHS is doing differently in procurement. Panel discussion with Martin Bromiley, Colette Longstaffe and Tracey Herlihey joined by Rob Turpin from the BSI and chaired by John Pickles, CHFG Chair. Dan Jenkins, Head of Research (Human Factors and Interaction), DCA Design International, looks at how we can use Human Factors to design better medical devices. Professor Chris Frerk, Anaesthetist, gives real life examples of the impact of poor design. Richard Featherstone, Director of Human Factors Research & Design at Emergo by UL, talks about medical devices and user errors. Panel discussion by Professor Chris Frerk and Dan Jenkins plus Duncan McPherson from the MHRA, Chaired by Professor Rhona Flin, CHFG Trustee.- Posted
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- Communication
- Safety process
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Content Article
Through SHIFT to Safety, the CPSI will help: Patients and their families shift to advocate for their healthcare safety. Healthcare providers shift to prioritise safety when caring for patients. Leaders in healthcare organisations shift to create a positive patient safety culture. SHIFT to Safety promotes a positive, safe healthcare experience for patients, providers, and leaders in healthcare organisations. The tools and resources empower everyone to understand how to make safety a priority while navigating the healthcare system. Includes a short video explaining SHIFT to Safety.- Posted
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- Patient safety strategy
- User-centred design
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Content Article
South Australian Patient Safety Report (2017)
Claire Cox posted an article in International reports
The report includes: Safety and quality programs Coronial findings Infection control and prevention strategy Medication safety Blood and blood product safety- Posted
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- Safety culture
- User-centred design
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Content Article
What will I learn? The report identifies 10 lessons to support providers and commissioners seeking to adopt this new approach: Start by focusing on a specific population. Involve primary care from the start. Go where the energy is. Spend time developing shared understanding of challenges. Work through and thoroughly test assumptions about how activities will achieve results. Find ways to learn from others and assess suitability of interventions. Set up an ‘engine room’ for change. Distribute decision-making roles. Invest in workforce development at all levels. Test, evaluate and adapt for continuous improvement.- Posted
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- Transformation
- Process redesign
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Content Article
Webinar: Using Human Factors in Hospital Technology Procurement
Claire Cox posted an article in Equipment design
The webinar covers: human factors pitfall of hospital procurement usability testing task efficiency examples of good and not so good design. -
Content Article
Using design for patient safety - NHS England
Claire Cox posted an article in Processes
Design principles covered: Noise Use of colour Equipment Storage Single rooms Medication packaging- Posted
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- Process redesign
- User-centred design
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Content Article
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Content Article
Telecare and telehealth - Age UK
Claire Cox posted an article in Telecare
What will I learn? What is telehealth? How could telehealth help me? What is telecare? How could telecare help me? How to get telecare products and services What do I need to consider when buying telecare products? What should I do next?- Posted
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- Patient
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Content Article
This article is aimed at doctors who are practising with telemedicine and would need to understand the guidance and regulation. -
Content Article
Oxford Academic Health Science Network: Good Hydration!
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in AHSNs
Key outcomes UTI hospital admissions reduced by 36% in the four pilot care homes (150 residents). UTIs requiring antibiotics reduced by 58%. The gap between UTIs increased from an average of nine days in the baseline period to 80 days in the implementation and sustainability phase. One residential home was UTI-free for 243 consecutive days. Similar outcomes noted in pilot 2 care homes (215 residents).- Posted
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- Care home staff
- Care home
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