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Found 61 results
  1. Content Article
    This recording is part of a series of webinars by the Patient Academy for Innovation and Research (PAIR Academy), The International Alliance of Patients’ Organizations (IAPO) and Dakshama Health, to introduce the Strategic Framework of the World Health Organization's Global Patient Safety Challenge - Medication Without Harm. The theme of this sixth webinar is "Medication Safety in Polypharmacy and Transitions of Care."
  2. Content Article
    This year World Patient Safety Day, due to take place on Saturday 17 September 2022, will focus on medication safety, promoting safe medication practices to prevent medication errors and reducing medication-related harm. This page links to resources to mark World Patient Safety Day from the official World Health Organization (WHO) website.
  3. Content Article
    This report by the consultancy firm Deloitte looks at patient safety across biopharmaceutical (biopharma) value chains, arguing that change is needed to make medications safer for patients and add value to pharmaceutical products. The authors highlight that there is currently great potential for strategies to increase safety, improve equity and enhance patient engagement and experience. Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) technologies and data analytics, combined with increased incidence of adverse event reports (AERs) and increasing expectation of more personalised, preventative, predictive and participatory (4P) medicine, present an opportunity to improve pharmacovigilance.
  4. Content Article
    This blog on the NHS England website looks at how Written Medicine, a service that provides bilingual medication information, is helping to reduce healthcare inequalities and medical errors in London. Written Medicine’s software allows pharmacies and hospitals to translate and print medication information, instructions and warnings. Drawn from a dataset of 3,500 phrases, printed labels are available in fifteen different languages. The bilingual labels help patients take ownership of their treatment, giving them a better understanding of how to take their prescribed medication. The solution is helping to reduce errors, improve medication adherence and enhance patient safety and experience. The blog also looks at the experience of London North West University Healthcare NHS Trust (LNWH) using Written Medicine. A 2019 audit showed that the service was valued by patients and highly successful in increasing medication adherence through empowering patients.
  5. Content Article
    In this episode of the Driving Insights to Action podcast, patient safety advocates Soojin Jun and Sue Sheridan talk about the role of the World Health Organization's Global Patient Safety Action Plan in helping reduce medication errors in healthcare. They also share their personal experiences of family members' deaths as a result of avoidable harm in healthcare.
  6. Content Article
    The National Medication Safety Symposium was held in Sydney, Australia, in support of World Patient Safety Day. The presentations from the 2-day conference can be viewed on YouTube from link below.
  7. Content Article
    The World Health Organisation's third World Patient Safety Day took place on 17 September. This year’s theme was medication safety. In this blog, Clare Wade, Assistant Director of Casework at the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO) discusses the impact of medication errors and gives examples of poor practice.
  8. Content Article
    This dashboard presents the results of a patient safety survey conducted by the European Alliance for Access to Safe Medicines (EAASM) and European Collaborative Action on Medication Errors and Traceability (ECAMET). The dashboard shows variations in different hospital-reported measures of patient safety across thirteen European countries. The questions in the survey focus on accreditation, training, electronic health records and recording, tracking and publishing of medication error data.
  9. Content Article
    Online healthcare services and apps can help people take more control of their health, by getting access to care easily and when it suits them. This guidance for patients aims to help patients keep themselves safe when using online health services. Produced by a collaboration of UK health organisations, it includes six top tips for accessing healthcare online: Check if the online healthcare service and healthcare professionals working there are registered with UK regulators Ask questions about how the service works Answer questions honestly about your health and medical history Find out your options for treatment and how to take any medicines you’re prescribed Expect to be asked for consent for information to be shared with other healthcare professionals involved in your care Check what after-care you will receive
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