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Content Article
In this podcast to support providers with the transition to the Learn from Patient Safety Events (LFPSE) service, the NHS's new national system for the recording and analysis of patient safety events, NHS England talks to Zahra and Mandy, NHS England reporting leads, about the practical steps providers can take to get connected to LFPSE. It covers how to get started, what to do with your old data, the kinds of support available, what transition means for ICBs, and what the Reporting Leads have learned from the process so far. -
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This study, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, looks at the frequency, preventability and severity of patient harm in a random sample of admissions from 11 Massachusetts hospitals during 2018. From this sample, it identified adverse events in nearly one in four admissions, approximately a quarter of which were deemed as preventable.- Posted
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- USA
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Laura Pickup and Suzy Broadbent present on the impact staff fatigue has on patient safety.- Posted
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- Fatigue / exhaustion
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This article by the Betsy Lehman Center in Massachusetts draws attention to research by ECRI, a US non-profit research and risk management firm, which shows that efforts to address racial inequalities in medical care need to include an examination of the way in which patient safety events are reported. Research by ECRI shows that existing patient safety reporting systems may be undercounting events experienced by patients who are Black , Latino or from other ethnic groups. It also highlights that racial, ethnic and other demographic data about patients is missing in adverse event reports from most US healthcare organisations.- Posted
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- USA
- Health inequalities
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In September 2022, The Care Quality Commission published four reports into the care provided by Spectrum a provider of Autism services in Cornwall. All four inspections concluded that the services were inadequate. -
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NHS England has recorded two podcasts sharing insight and advice from organisations that have completed the transition from the National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) to the new Learn from Patient Safety Events (LFPSE).- Posted
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- LFPSE
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Incident reporting is a crucial tool for improving patient safety, alongside an open culture that supports this. In the NHS the new Learn from Patient Safety Events (LFPSE) service is now being rolled out to replace the current National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) and Strategic Executive Information System (StEIS). This article details correspondence between Patient Safety Learning and NHS England in relation to concerns raised by staff about the development and implementation of the LFPSE service- Posted
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- LFPSE
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Content Article
In this podcast, the Learn from Patient Safety Events (LFPSE) team talks to the National Director for Patient Safety about the new LFPSE service, why it’s important, and the benefits he thinks it will bring for patient safety.- Posted
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- LFPSE
- Patient safety strategy
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The Patient Safety Database (PSD), previously called the Anesthesia Safety Network, is committed in the delivery of better perioperative care. Its primary goal is to make visible the lack of reliability of healthcare and the absolute necessity to build a new system for improving patient safety. This year, PSD has also been involved in the development of the SafeTeam Academy, an e-learning training platform associated with the Patient Safety Database, which offers video immersive courses using the power of cinema to train healthcare professionals. This is the latest newsletter from PSD, featuring a wide range of content by safety experts across Europe. -
Content Article
Radar Healthcare has published its 'Incident Reporting in Secondary Care' whitepaper – an in-depth analysis of reporting within secondary care and its effects on patient safety. It has taken a look into the current state of incident reporting: the good work being done, the concerns across the sector, and how we can all aim to improve the situation. The report was conducted using a panel provided by SERMO from its database of UK Nurses and includes the views from 100 nursing staff members working in hospital wards across the UK. Those surveyed work with hospital in-patients daily and are responsible for reporting safety and regulatory incidents involving patients to senior colleagues.- Posted
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- Patient safety incident
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News Article
The deadline for the NHS to move to a new system for safety incident reporting has been delayed after widespread concerns the rollout could be a ‘disaster’. A memo from NHS England to local teams yesterday, seen by HSJ, says the deadline to transition to the new “learning from patient safety events” database has been pushed back by six months to September 2023. The creation of LFPSE is a key strand of NHSE’s safety strategy, along with the overhaul of how serious incidents are investigated. It aims to make it easier for staff across all healthcare settings to record safety events, as the service will be expanded to include primary care. It will replace the current national reporting and learning system, a central database created in 2003 to help identify trends and maximise learning from mistakes. The new system is part of a national strategy that pledges to save 1,000 extra lives and £100m in care costs each year from 2023-24. Multiple patient safety managers at local trusts had raised concerns to HSJ about the previous March deadline, with one patient safety lead saying it would have been a “disaster” if enforced. Helen Hughes, chief executive of charity Patient Safety Learning, said NHSE also needs to change its way of working, as well as the deadline extension. She said: “We believe that NHS England needs to seriously reconsider their approach to engaging with trust leaders and staff on this issue, so that improvements can be made to the new LFPSE service to ensure it has the best possible chance of success, and to enable patient safety improvement.” Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 20 October 2022 -
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The ‘No Blame Culture’ being adopted by the NHS draws attention from individuals and towards systems in the process of understanding an error. This article in the Journal of Applied Philosophy argues for a ‘responsibility culture’, where healthcare professionals are held responsible in cases of foreseeable and avoidable errors. The authors argue that proponents of No Blame Culture often fail to distinguish between blaming someone and holding them responsible, They examine the idea of ‘responsibility without blame’, applying this to cases of error in healthcare. Sensitive to the undesirable effects of blaming healthcare professionals and to the moral significance of holding individuals accountable, the authors argue that a responsibility culture has significant advantages over a No Blame Culture as it can enhance patient safety and support medical professionals in learning from their mistakes, while also recognising and validating the legitimate sense of responsibility that many medical professionals feel following avoidable error, and motivating medical professionals to report errors.- Posted
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- Just Culture
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This 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. Jonathan talks to us about the importance of leadership in creating a safety culture and the role of Patient Safety Learning in fostering collaboration and establishing standards for patient safety.- Posted
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- Leadership
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In this blog, Patient Safety Learning looks in detail at the results of the NHS Staff Survey 2022, focusing on responses relating to reporting, speaking up and acting on safety concerns. It includes the following key points: It is difficult to imagine other safety critical industries would deem these results acceptable. Nearly half of all respondents did not feel confident their organisation would address their concerns about unsafe clinical practice. It is hugely concerning that over 40% of respondents could not say that they would be treated fairly if involved in a patient safety incident. This could significantly undermine the willingness of staff to raise concerns, with significant consequences for patient safety. There needs to be greater urgency to improve the safety culture in the health service. NHS England needs to recognise the scale of this challenge and provide clarity on how it will work with organisations to tackle this. NHS England, working in partnership with the National Guardian and the Care Quality Commission, should bring forward as a matter of urgency robust and specific commitments to drive forward the work of improving the safety culture in the NHS.- Posted
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- Speaking up
- Staff safety
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Content Article
The Operating Room Black Box, a system of sensors and software, is being used in operating rooms in 24 hospitals in the US, Canada and Western Europe. The device captures video, audio, patient vital signs and data from surgical devices in an effort to improve patient safety. This article in the Wall Street Journal looks at how Black Box technology at Duke University Hospital has identified several areas for improvement, including that the hospital needed a better system for sending and tracking specimens. The article also highlights some concerns raised by healthcare professionals about the use of Black Boxes, including fear that data collected might be used to punish staff, or that it may be used as evidence in medicolegal cases outside of hospitals' control.- Posted
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- Surgery - General
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Pennsylvania hospitals are required to report patient safety events, but do you know why it’s so important? Event reports can be the first indication of underlying problems, regardless of whether harm occurs. They also can be tools to trigger change facility wide, or even nationwide. This resource from the Patient Safety Authority allows you to click one of the categories or type keywords into the search field to find stories of event reports that inspired staff to make changes that improved patient care and safety throughout their hospital. -
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This guide by the National Patient Safety Agency offers guidance for junior doctors on what to do if they are involved in a patient safety incident. It includes case studies on: medication error competence communication patient identification reporting It also includes guidance on how to deal with a complaint.- Posted
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- Reporting
- Human error
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Patient Safety Learning recently interviewed Keith Conradi, former HSIB chief executive, on why healthcare needs to operate as a safety management system. In this interview, we speak to Jono Broad, part of the South West Integrated Personalised Care team at NHS England, to hear his response to this, how patients, families and relatives can get involved, and why we need to really embed patient safety in a management culture and a healthcare management system.- Posted
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- Patient engagement
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Content Article
The Patient Safety Authority has developed a series of decision trees to determine whether a patient safety event is a serious event or incident in a range of different situations.- Posted
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- LFPSE
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News Article
CQC suspends routine inspections amid covid-19 outbreak
Patient Safety Learning posted a news article in News
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has suspended its routine inspections due to the coronavirus outbreak following pressure from system leaders and NHS bosses. The decision to suspend inspections where there are no immediate safety concerns is understood to have been taken by the CQC’s executive team this morning, senior sources told HSJ. Both the NHS Confederation and The Royal College of GPs said the decision had been made. NHS Confederation called the move a “sigh of relief” for front-line staff, while the RCGPs said it would enable GPs to dedicate their time to providing care. NHS Confederation chief executive Niall Dickson said: “Front-line staff will breathe a sigh of relief that CQC has responded to our concerns and will now postpone its inspections where there is no immediate safety concern so that they can gear themselves up to prepare for the huge task ahead in dealing with the coronavirus pandemic.” Read full story Source: HSJ, 16 March 2020- Posted
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- Medicine - Infectious disease
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The Community Pharmacy Patient Safety Group conducted this anonymous survey on patient safety culture in Autumn 2021 and invited pharmacy staff from across the UK to participate. The aim of the survey was to understand patient safety practice from the perspective of frontline pharmacy teams. Both the full results and an infographic of key results are available to download.- Posted
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Huge numbers of patients suffer avoidable harm in US hospitals each year as a result of unsafe care. In this blog, published in the Harvard Business Review, the authors argue that these numbers could be greatly reduced by taking four actions: Make patient safety a top priority in hospitals’ practices and cultures, establish a National Patient Safety Board, create a national patient and staff reporting mechanism, and turn on EHRs machine learning systems that can alert staff to risky conditions.- Posted
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- Leadership
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In this blog for The Health Foundation, the authors make five recommendations for strengthening NHS management and leadership: Support providers and systems to tackle variation in management practice Improve access to training and development opportunities Ensure training equips managers and leaders with the skills they need today Tackle the reporting burden and 'priority thickets' facing managers Ensure the role of managers and leaders is better understood and valued- Posted
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- Leadership
- Quality improvement
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This webpage provides an overview of how human factors affect outcomes in surgical emergencies. It includes: An introduction to human factors Video exploring the case of Elaine Bromiley Explanation of human error and the Swiss Cheese Model Table of factors that reduce human error 'What if?' video showing how simple changes could have resulted in a different outcome in Elaine Bromiley's case Practical tips for managing the paediatric airway in a critically ill child- Posted
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- Human factors
- Paediatrics
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