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Showing results for tags 'Communication'.
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Content ArticleThis report evaluates Schwartz Center Rounds® (rounds) in England. Rounds were introduced into the UK in 2009 to support healthcare staff to deliver compassionate care, something the Francis report (Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust Public Inquiry) identified as lacking. Rounds are organisation-wide forums that prompt reflection and discussion of the emotional, social and ethical challenges of healthcare work, with the aim of improving staff well-being and patient care.
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- Accountability
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The case for employee engagement in the NHS: three case studies
Claire Cox posted an article in Good practice
This report by The Point of Care Foundation, looks at staff engagement in three NHS hospital trusts and provides insights into the views of staff and managers.- Posted
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- Accountability
- Communication
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The Point of Care Foundation – Behind closed doors (July 2017)
Claire Cox posted an article in Culture
This briefing highlights evidence on NHS staff, their experience at work, the pressures they face and the consequences for patients. The Point of Care Foundation believes that it’s critically important that NHS employers pay attention to staff and their experience at work because when staff feel positive and engaged with work it has a positive impact on patient experience.- Posted
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- Hospital ward
- AHP
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Content ArticleTh British Medical Association provide a number of services to help and advise doctors who are experiencing bullying at work but also to those who may have witnessed examples of bullying and wish to raise concerns. This video offers some advice for staff affected.
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NHS Employers - Stop bullying: it’s in your hands (leaflet)
Claire Cox posted an article in Bullying and fear
This leaflet by NHS Employers (Wales) explains what bullying in the workplace is, how it can affect people and what to do about it.- Posted
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- Bullying
- Communication
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Content ArticleThis 15 minute video from the Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust gives an introduction to what human factors is within healthcare.
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- Anaesthetist
- Nurse
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Content ArticleInteresting article, by the Patient Safety Network, around how patients can be involved in the solution and the cause of some patient safety incidents.
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- Patient
- Post-discharge support
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Content ArticleInvolving patients in improving safety is a Health Foundation publication also known as an evidence scan. It is designed to help those involved in improving the quality of healthcare understand what research is available on a particular topic. This publication describes research into how patients have been involved in improving safety. It addresses two questions: How have patients and carers been involved in improving safety in healthcare? Is there any evidence that patient involvement leads to improved safety?
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- Patient
- Patient factors
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Content ArticleIn this thought paper published by The Health Foundation, Dr Rebecca Lawton and Dr Gerry Armitage look at ways to involve patients in clinical safety and the readiness of patients and health professionals to adopt new roles. They discuss the importance of involving patients in the development of patient engagement and involvement strategies. Genuine patient involvement in their own care requires a fundamental cultural shift in the relationship between patients and clinicians.
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Content ArticleThis discussion paper published in Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare (PSQH) examines the possible barriers and facilitators to patient engagement drawn from a literature search. It proposes a framework with recommendations to address these barriers and promote patient-provider engagement.
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- Patient
- Patient factors
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Content ArticleA report of the National Patient Safety Foundation’s Lucian Leape Institute's roundtable on consumer engagement in patient safety. This US based report looks at how increasing engagement between those who provide care and those who receive it at every level can result in improved health care outcomes for individuals and safer and more productive work environments for healthcare professionals.
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- Patient factors
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Content ArticleThe involvement of patients in their care is a top priority for the NHS, highlighted in the NHS Constitution and the NHS Five Year Forward View. Healthcare providers are encouraged to develop different relationships with patients and communities to help empower them and engage them in their care. This same approach applies to patient safety in healthcare, where greater engagement of patients is seen as one of the building blocks for improvement. .
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- Patient
- Communication problems
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Healthier Lancashire & Cumbria - Digital Future
Gary Saunders posted an article in Implementation of improvements
A case study on how Healthier Lancashire and Cumbria have been driving forward their digital strategy. This strategy includes how they are standardising and redesigning digital systems to improve patient safety (see Theme 4 - Manage the system more effectively). -
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How can After Action Review (AAR) improve patient safety?
Judy Walker posted an article in Good practice
The NHS Long Term Plan highlighted several safety issues that need to be addressed: the fear of blame and retribution which curtails reporting and learning, lack of staff understanding of patient safety matters and workforce issues. This short article summarises what I have learnt about how After Action Review (AAR) can directly address the first two of these and indirectly impact on the third.- Posted
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Content ArticlePolicy to date has mostly focused on the role of 'whistleblowers' in raising concerns about quality and safety of patient care in healthcare settings. However, most opportunities for personnel to identify and act on these concerns are likely to occur much further upstream, in the day-to-day mundane interactions of everyday work. Using qualitative data from over 900 hours of ethnographic observation and 98 interviews across 19 English intensive care units (ICUs), Tarrant et al., in a paper published in Social Science & Medicine, studied how personnel gave voice to concerns about patient safety or poor practice.
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- HDU / ICU
- Anaesthetist
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#TheatreCapChallenge: Where’s the evidence?
Claire Cox posted an article in Implementation of improvements
PatientSafe Network in Australia has been promoting the theatre cap challenge across the world. By wearing your name on your theatre cap it can improve team work and patient safety. The PatientSafe Network is a registered non for profit charity. It has been developed by front line healthcare staff and is for anyone to use – patients, relatives, doctors, nurses, pharmacists, healthcare managers, equipment and system developers, insurers – who wants to improve patient safety.- Posted
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- Operating theatre / recovery
- Anaesthetist
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Three ways to create psychological safety in healthcare
Claire Cox posted an article in Staff safety
How can leaders ― with or without formal authority ― create psychological safety in healthcare? In this short video, Amy Edmondson, Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at Harvard Business School, describes three key actions to foster a psychologically safe work environment.- Posted
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- Duty of Candour
- Communication
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Content ArticleLewis Blackman, a healthy 15-year-old boy, died in 2000 after an elective surgery. In this video, Lewis' mother Helen Haskell, President of Mothers Against Medical Error and member of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Board of Directors, explains why communication isn’t always the norm after adverse events and why this dynamic is changing.
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- Investigation
- Patient death
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AHRQ: Warm handoffs improve patient safety
Claire Cox posted an article in How to engage for patient safety
In 2015, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) sponsored the development of a 'Guide to Improving Patient Safety in Primary Care Settings by Engaging Patients and Families'. One of the strategies introduced was a 'warm handoff' A warm handoff is a handoff conducted in person between two members of the health care team in front of the patient and family or caregiver. This video demonstrates warm handoffs in medical offices. -
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Promote a culture of safety with good catch reports
Claire Cox posted an article in In health care
Near misses or good catches present organisations with learning opportunities. Using data comparisons run by the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority, this article by Wallace et al. highlights how good catch programmes can contribute to significant reductions in harmful events and offers insights from risk managers and patient safety officers regarding elements that are necessary to establish successful good catch initiatives and the culture to support them.- Posted
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Let's Talk Team Work: University of Western Australia
Claire Cox posted an article in Surgery
This short animation from the University of Western Australia highlights the importance of a multidisciplinary team briefing within the operating theatre environment.- Posted
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- Operating theatre / recovery
- Communication
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Content ArticleDesigned and tested by the Institute of Healthcare Improvement (IHI)’s world-renowned safety experts, the Patient Safety Essentials Toolkit can help you improve teamwork and communication, understand the underlying issues that can cause errors, and create and maintain reliable systems. IHI's Vice President, Frank Federico, helped develop the contents of the new toolkit. In the following interview, he provides an overview of how to put the toolkit to good use.
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- Communication
- Leadership style
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Content ArticleEpilepsy12 was announced as the winner of the 2018 Richard Driscoll Memorial Award for outstanding patient involvement in clinical audit at the annual Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP) AGM in London. The submission from the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) demonstrated Epilepsy12’s overarching goal to improve NHS healthcare services for children and young people with seizures and epilepsy.
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- Patient
- Paediatrics
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Content ArticleFollowing the investigation into the Mid Staffordshire Hospital (United Kingdom) and the subsequent Francis reports (2013 and 2015), all healthcare staff, including students, are called upon to raise concerns if they are concerned about patient safety. Despite this advice, it is evident that some individuals are reluctant to do so and the reasons for this are not always well understood. This research study from Fisher and Kiernan, published in Nurse Education Today, provides an insight into the factors that influence student nurses to speak up or remain silent when witnessing sub-optimal care.
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- Nurse
- Communication
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Content ArticleThis document provides guidance for nurses, midwives and nursing associates on raising concerns (which includes ‘whistleblowing’). It explains the processes you should follow when raising a concern, provides information about the legislation in this area, and tells you where you can get confidential support and advice.