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Found 37 results
  1. Event
    With the constantly evolving digital landscape in health and care, clinical safety has never been more important than it is now, and every health and care organisation and system supplier should have a Clinical Safety Officer to assess, prevent and address risks and hazards. PRSB and Ethos Ltd are delighted to offer you online training providing you with everything you need to become a certified Clinical Safety Officer. The one-day training programme includes a clinically led session on PRSB standards and their importance to delivering safe care. Why join? Learn in a small group and friendly environment (8-15 trainees per session) Get a comprehensive and in-depth understanding of the role of information standards in clinical safety The CPD UK accredited course equips you with the basic requirements of the DCB0129 and 0160 standards for clinical risk assessment and management. Register
  2. Event
    With the constantly evolving digital landscape in health and care, clinical safety has never been more important than it is now, and every health and care organisation and system supplier should have a Clinical Safety Officer to assess, prevent and address risks and hazards. PRSB and Ethos Ltd are delighted to offer you online training providing you with everything you need to become a certified Clinical Safety Officer. The one-day training programme includes a clinically led session on PRSB standards and their importance to delivering safe care. Why join? Learn in a small group and friendly environment (8-15 trainees per session) Get a comprehensive and in-depth understanding of the role of information standards in clinical safety The CPD UK accredited course equips you with the basic requirements of the DCB0129 and 0160 standards for clinical risk assessment and management. Register
  3. Event
    until
    With the constantly evolving digital landscape in health and care, clinical safety has never been more important than it is now, and every health and care organisation and system supplier should have a Clinical Safety Officer to assess, prevent and address risks and hazards. PRSB and Ethos Ltd are delighted to offer you online training providing you with everything you need to become a certified Clinical Safety Officer. The one-day training programme includes a clinically led session on PRSB standards and their importance to delivering safe care. Why join? Learn in a small group and friendly environment (8-15 trainees per session) Get a comprehensive and in-depth understanding of the role of information standards in clinical safety The CPD UK accredited course equips you with the basic requirements of the DCB0129 and 0160 standards for clinical risk assessment and management. Register
  4. Event
    until
    With the constantly evolving digital landscape in health and care, clinical safety has never been more important than it is now, and every health and care organisation and system supplier should have a Clinical Safety Officer to assess, prevent and address risks and hazards. PRSB and Ethos Ltd are delighted to offer you online training providing you with everything you need to become a certified Clinical Safety Officer. The one-day training programme includes a clinically led session on PRSB standards and their importance to delivering safe care. Why join? Learn in a small group and friendly environment (8-15 trainees per session) Get a comprehensive and in-depth understanding of the role of information standards in clinical safety The CPD UK accredited course equips you with the basic requirements of the DCB0129 and 0160 standards for clinical risk assessment and management. Register
  5. Event
    until
    With the constantly evolving digital landscape in health and care, clinical safety has never been more important than it is now, and every health and care organisation and system supplier should have a Clinical Safety Officer to assess, prevent and address risks and hazards. PRSB and Ethos Ltd are delighted to offer you online training providing you with everything you need to become a certified Clinical Safety Officer. The one-day training programme includes a clinically led session on PRSB standards and their importance to delivering safe care. Why join? Learn in a small group and friendly environment (8-15 trainees per session) Get a comprehensive and in-depth understanding of the role of information standards in clinical safety The CPD UK accredited course equips you with the basic requirements of the DCB0129 and 0160 standards for clinical risk assessment and management. Register
  6. Content Article
    Many clinicians and managers struggle with the concept of waste in clinical processes. After hearing and reading about the transformation of healthcare at Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle, the Gordon Caldwell read Toyota Culture the Heart and Soul of the Toyota Way. This article discusses some of the concepts of waste in clinical processes, concentrating particularly on the waste and costs of over-investigation.
  7. Content Article
    Very preterm infants are at increased risk of adverse outcomes in early childhood. This study in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health assessed whether delayed clamping of the umbilical cord reduces mortality or major disability at two years. The authors found that clamping the umbilical cord at least 60 seconds after birth reduced the risk of death or major disability at two years by 17%, reflecting a 30% reduction in relative mortality with no difference in major disability.
  8. Content Article
    This article in the Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology reviews the literature from various geopolitical regions and describes how a substantial number of patients with diabetes improperly discard their sharps. Data support the need to develop multifaceted and innovative approaches to reduce the risks associated with improper disposal of medical sharps into local communities.
  9. Content Article
    This webinar from the Faculty of Clinical Informatics looks at the problems individual clinicians have with reporting and fixing issues with clinical systems across the NHS. Panel members also discuss ideas for how processes can be improved. The panel was made up of: Dr Marcus Baw, GP and Emergency Physician, Chair of the RCGP Health Informatics Group, FCI Fellow and open source developer Dr Ian Thompson, Clinical Lead (Primary Care) in Digital Health and Care at The Scottish Government Dr Lesley Kay, Consultant Rheumatologist at Newcastle Hospitals and Deputy Medical Director at the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch  Emma Melhuish, Principal Informatics Specialist at NHS Digital Neil Watson, Director of Pharmacy, Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
  10. Content Article
    Many diagnostic mistakes are caused by reasoning errors, but lack of feedback makes it difficult for healthcare providers to make improvements in this area. This paper, published in BMJ Quality & Safety, describes the reason for and process of developing 'The Diagnosis Learning Cycle', a new model for feedback and improvement in diagnosis. The model is based on theory and knowledge from both outside and within the field of healthcare. It proposes a standardised feedback mechanism that includes concrete measures of factors such as reasoning and confidence.
  11. Content Article
    The Essentials of Safe Care is a practical package of evidence-based guidance and support that enables Scotland’s health and social care system to deliver safe care.
  12. Content Article
    Double checking is a standard practice intended to improve patient safety. It is used in different areas of health care, such as medication administration, radiotherapy and blood transfusion. Some studies have found double checking to be a useful practice, which has been endorsed by agencies and individuals. The confidence in double checking exists in spite of the lack of evidence substantiating its effectiveness. In this study, Hewitt et al. asks: ‘How do front line practitioners conceptualise double checking? What are the weaknesses of double checking? What alternate views of double checking could render it a more robust process?’ The authors conclude that double checking deserves more questioning, as there are limitations to the process. Practitioners could view double checking through alternate lenses, and thus help strengthen this ubiquitous practice that is rarely challenged.
  13. Content Article
    Keeping patients and staff safe is a top priority for every healthcare organisation. Leaders must be vigilant in continually monitoring, measuring, and improving risk, as well as identifying processes, environments, cultures and other factors affecting patient safety and organisational performance. ECRI’s Risk Assessments provide an efficient web-based solution for conducting such evaluations. These assessments collect multidisciplinary safety perspectives—from front-line workers to the executive suite—with reporting and analysis dashboards to help identify opportunities for improvement.
  14. Content Article
    This policy paper from the Department of Health and Social Care sets out the Government’s response to the recommendations of the investigation into the death of Elizabeth Dixon in respect of the failures of care she received from the NHS.
  15. Content Article
    This national primary care clinical pathway for constipation in children guidance supports clinicians in the prevention and management of constipation in children and young people by providing a clear and standardised approach, based on guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), the British National Formulary for Children (BNFc) and clinical expert groups. The pathway promotes available resources for clinicians, families and other care providers and ensures they are easily accessible, as well as raises the profile of constipation in children and young people with a learning disability as a factor in adult mortality rates.
  16. Content Article
    This NCEPOD report looks at the quality of care provided to patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) aged 16 years and over who were admitted to hospital when acutely unwell. It highlights the findings of a review into the pathway of care for patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) which explored multidisciplinary care and organisational factors in the process of identifying, screening, assessing, treating and monitoring their ability to swallow. You can view and download the following diagrams related to the report: Full report Summary report Summary sheet Recommendation checklist   Infographic Slide set Commissioners' guide Fishbone diagram Recommendations Audit toolkit
  17. Content Article
    Patients are becoming increasingly involved in their health through technology such as health apps, and regulators are already struggling to control the market without constraining innovation. Clinical Safety must therefore adapt to the ever-changing world of health apps, if it is to fulfil its purpose and ensure that only the safest technologies are used by patients. In this blog, GP Tom Micklewright looks at some of the safety issues relating to health apps. He highlights that unlike with other new systems, health apps are rarely deployed in a controlled environment, which can cause problems when trying to apply clinical safety standards to them. He looks at five of the issues health apps can cause for safety teams: Intended scope and use Updated health apps Clinical safety, health apps and AI Different places, different features Monitoring clinical safety He then offers some potential solutions to these problems: Continuous assessment of health apps Centralise clinical safety, don’t localise Differentiated approach to clinical safety Aggregated incident reporting
  18. Content Article
    In this opinion piece in The BMJ, consultant radiologist Giles Maskell examines changes to the ways in which medical imaging is used in the health service. He states that imaging used to be ordered, when necessary, at the end of a diagnostic process, whereas now many doctors are asking for scans before they will see a patient for the first time. The article highlights some of the implications of this shift in practice, including on screening service capacity and on the interpretation of test results.
  19. Content Article
    The successful implementation of clinical practice guidelines should improve quality of care by decreasing inappropriate variation and expediting the application of effective advances to practice. However, despite wide promulgation, practice guidelines have had limited effect on changing physician behavior. Cabana et al. conducted a systematic review of the barriers to physician adherence to clinical practice guidelines, practice parameters, clinical policies or national consensus statements. They found that physician adherence is dependent on physician awareness (31 examples), agreement (68 examples), self-efficacy (13 examples), outcome expectancy (12 examples), motivation (3 examples), and the absence of external barriers to perform guideline recommendations (62 examples). The findings suggest that studies describing interventions to improve physician adherence may not be generalisable, since barriers in one setting may not be present in another. Using this analysis, the authors propose a framework which describes the barriers that must be overcome to improve physician adherence. This framework can be used (1) as a method to profile barriers or sources of poor adherence and thus (2) as a diagnostic tool to standardise and select appropriate interventions to improve adherence. The selection of interventions to change physician behaviour has been haphazard in the past. This analysis offers a more rational approach towards improving physician adherence to practice guidelines as well as a framework for further research.
  20. Content Article
    The Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP) is a method that can help clinical teams make care safer by combining improved teamwork, clinical best practices, and the science of safety. The Core CUSP toolkit gives clinical teams the training resources and tools to apply the CUSP method and build their capacity to address safety issues. A number of toolkits are available to help clinical teams adopt the CUSP method to make care safer. Most teams will want to start with the Core CUSP Toolkit to learn key principles of the CUSP method. Once you’ve learned the basics, additional toolkits can help you target certain safety issues in specific settings of care. Created for clinicians by clinicians, the Core CUSP toolkit is modular and modifiable to meet individual unit needs. Each module includes teaching tools and resources to support change at the unit level, presented through facilitator notes that take you step by step through the module, presentation slides, tools, and videos.
  21. Content Article
    A report on the investigation into the death of Elizabeth Dixon and a series of recommendations in respect of the failures in the care she received from the NHS.
  22. Content Article
    An educational session from The Association for Perioperative Practice (AfPP) dedicated to the dangers of noise and distraction in healthcare with a possible solution, Below Ten Thousand. Below Ten Thousand is a language-based safety tool for any clinical arena where 'noise and distraction' is a problem, and where high performance teams need to quickly gain 'situational awareness' and ‘directed focus’ in order to successfully navigate the perils of acute healthcare whilst providing first class interventions. 
  23. Content Article
    The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) is a non-departmental public body that provides national guidance and advice to improve health and social care in England. This manual explains the processes and methods used to develop and update NICE guidelines.
  24. Content Article
    Clear communication, awareness of core values and the right incentives are all key to a successful clinical audit, writes George Absi in this HSJ article.
  25. Content Article
    I'm Martin. In this blog I want to talk about my role as a Macmillan acute oncology clinical nurse specialist (CNS) and what our team has done to improve patient safety within the acute ward of our hospitals. Coming from a non-oncology background there was a lot to learn when I moved into acute oncology. My background was mainly acute cardiac and respiratory, but this allowed me to notice how powerful and time effective the presence of an acute oncology CNS could be in improving cancer patient safety within the emergency department.
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