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Found 297 results
  1. Content Article
    On the 18 October it was announced that NHS Trusts have been given an optional six-month extension to implement Learn From Patient Safety Events (LFPSE). There are a lot of messages being talked about and there has been some confusion over what this means. So, what do organisations need to have in place by 31 March 2023 and what has changed? In this blog*, Radar Healthcare cover some of the key information.
  2. Content Article
    This survey by In-FACT (Independent Fetal Anti Convulsant Trust) is intended to provide patients, no matter what anti-epileptic drug (AED) they are prescribed or what condition the AED is prescribed for, the opportunity to report problems and worries about taking their medication during pregnancy. The results will be used to inform In-FACT's ongoing work to improve medication safety and their engagement with the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).
  3. Content Article
    Safety Management System (SMS) is a collection of structured, company-wide processes that provide effective risk-based decision-making for daily business functions. A SMS helps organisations offer products or services at the highest level of safety and maintain safe operations. This article explains more.
  4. Content Article
    This study in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association aimed to evaluate the feasibility of using Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) semantic features for automated identification of reports about patient safety incidents by type and severity. UMLS was compared with results produced by bag-of-words (BOW) classifiers on three testing datasets. The authors found that UMLS-based semantic classifiers were more effective in identifying incidents by type and extreme-risk events than classifiers using bag-of-words (BOW) features.
  5. Content Article
    Nine specialist mesh centres have been set up by NHS England to offer removal surgery and other treatment to women suffering from complications and pain as a result of vaginal mesh surgery, but women are reporting that they are not operating effectively. In this opinion piece, Kath Sansom highlights ten problems with these specialist mesh centres, evidenced by the real experiences of women who are part of the Sling the Mesh campaign Facebook group.
  6. Content Article
    The US President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) consists of individuals from sectors outside of the US Federal Government who advise the President on policy matters where the understanding of science, technology and innovation is key. This is the recording of a live-streamed meeting of PCAST, where invited speakers presented opportunities to advance scientific innovation, including improving patient safety.
  7. Content Article
    Authors of this commentary published in the Canadian Medical Association journal argue that many patients suffer from a specific adverse event on a daily basis: pain. It is never reported as an adverse event and corrective action is often not taken.
  8. Content Article
    This blog, published in the BMJ, sets the context for an Evidence Based Nursing (EBN) Twitter Chat that took place on 18 March 2015. The chat focused on whether mismanaged (undertreated) pain should be considered an adverse event. The Twitter Chat was hosted by Dr Alison Twycross who is editor of EBN and has also done lots of work in the area of paediatric pain management. This blog provides some context for the chat. The examples given relate to paediatric pain but the principles apply to pain in patients of all ages.
  9. Content Article
    Findings from the Healthcare Inspectorate Wales Chief Executive's Annual Report. This report provides an overview of the work undertaken during the past year and what has been found. Healthcare Inspectorate Wales is the independent inspectorate and regulator of healthcare in Wales.
  10. Content Article
    Steve Highley looks at responding positively to error using a personal experience involving his car and highlights how to find and deal with error traps.
  11. Content Article
    Presentation slides for topic 5 of the WHO Multi-professional Patient Safety Curriculum Guide. The learning objective from this topic is to understand the nature of error and how healthcare providers can learn from errors to improve patient safety.
  12. Content Article
    CIRAS (Confidential Reporting for Safety) is a safety charity for the transport industry. They look at a range of concerns affecting the health, wellbeing and safety of staff, passengers or the public.  The concerns raised through their hotline often have common themes – non-compliance, equipment issues, fatigue, security and working conditions – and they share this learning and good practice across the CIRAS community. Some of this learning and good practice can be applied to other industries and organisations, including healthcare. Each month, CIRAS publish a newsletter: Frontline Matters, with articles on health and safety.
  13. Content Article
    This document from the World Health Organization (WHO) is to urge the readers to understand the purpose, strengths and limitations of patient safety incident reporting. Data derived from incident reports can be very valuable in understanding the scale and nature of harm arising from health care, provided that the properties of the data are reviewed carefully and conclusions are drawn with caution. The use of incident reporting systems for true learning in order to achieve sustainable reductions in risk and improvements in patient safety is still work in progress. It can be and has been done, but not yet on the scale and with the speed that compares with some other high-risk industries. That is what we must all strive for. This technical guidance will help the journey to a position where we can show patients and their families how we used this learning to give them care that is safe and dependable, every time they need it.
  14. Content Article
    Healthcare worldwide is faced with a crisis of patient safety: every day, everywhere, patients are injured during the course of their care. Notwithstanding occasional successes in relation to specific harms, safety as a system characteristic has remained elusive. Mary Dixon-Woods and Peter J Pronovost propose that one neglected reason why the safety problem has proved so stubborn is that healthcare suffers from a pathology known in the public administration literature as the problem of many hands. It is a problem that arises in contexts where multiple actors – organisations, individuals, groups – each contribute to effects seen at system level, but it remains difficult to hold any single actor responsible for these effects. Efforts by individual actors, including local quality improvement projects, may have the paradoxical effect of undermining system safety. Many challenges cannot be resolved by individual organisations, since they require whole-sector coordination and action. The authors call for recognition of the problem of many hands and for attention to be given to how it might most optimally be addressed in a healthcare context.
  15. Content Article
    Jerome, a patient safety manager, discusses the impact the pandemic is having on patient referrals and waiting lists, and the subsequent increases in serious incidents and never events that will arise. With an already overstretched and exhausted workforce, how will these be investigated, how will this be managed? Jerome urges NHS England to give guidance.
  16. Content Article
    This article, published by the Journal of Clinical Nursing, argues there can be no healthy patient safety culture where Datix or other electronic incident reporting systems (EIRS) are trivialised and weaponised. Nurses at every level can support and enable the blame free culture where nurses use Datix to genuinely promote patient safety.  Follow the link below to download the full article. Other blogs you may also be interested in: “I’m going to Datix you” – a blog from Datix’s former chief executive and now chairman of Patient Safety Learning, Jonathan Hazan Silent witness: My experience when filing an incident report – newly qualified nurse describes what happened when she reported her first Datix for a serious incident. Marking your own homework – an anonymous blog
  17. Content Article
    Vaccination is the single most effective way to reduce deaths and severe illness from COVID-19. A national immunisation campaign has been underway since early December 2020. All vaccines and medicines have some side effects. These side effects need to be continuously balanced against the expected benefits in preventing illness. The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)'s role is to continually monitor safety during widespread use of a vaccine. They have in place a proactive strategy to do this. They also work closely with our public health partners in reviewing the effectiveness and impact of the vaccines to ensure the benefits continue to outweigh any possible side effects. Part of their monitoring role includes reviewing reports of suspected side effects. Any member of the public or health professional can submit suspected side effects through the Yellow Card scheme. The nature of Yellow Card reporting means that reported events are not always proven side effects. Some events may have happened anyway, regardless of vaccination. This is particularly the case when millions of people are vaccinated, and especially when most vaccines are being given to the most elderly people and people who have underlying illness.
  18. Content Article
    In Spring 2021, a new national Patient Safety Incident Management System (PSIMS) will enter its public beta stage. The new system will be phased in to replace the current National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS). Its aim is to maximise the NHS’s ability to learn from when things go wrong. In this, the first in a series of blogs from Lucie Mussett, PSIMS product owner, Lucie provides an introduction to PSIMS and some of the key features it will bring to support the NHS to make care safer., PSIMS product owner, Lucie provides an introduction to PSIMS and some of the key features it will bring to support the NHS to make care safer.
  19. Content Article
    The aim of this project from Hollis et al. was to improve engagement with the incident reporting process and to encourage staff to raise issues and create a proactive culture of quality improvement. This project demonstrates that a relatively simple intervention can have effect significant positive cultural change in an organisation over a small period of time. By giving frontline staff a mechanism to record issues it is possible to develop a positive culture of grass roots change. Incident reporting can act as a vehicle not only to improve patient safety but more broadly to generate ongoing ideas for quality improvement within an organisation.
  20. Content Article
    RIDDOR puts duties on employers, the self-employed and people in control of work premises (the Responsible Person) to report certain serious workplace accidents, occupational diseases and specified dangerous occurrences (near misses). There is no requirement under RIDDOR (The Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013) to report incidents of disease or deaths of members of the public, patients, care home residents or service users from COVID-19. The reporting requirements relating to cases of, or deaths from, COVID-19 under RIDDOR apply only to occupational exposure, that is, as a result of a person’s work.
  21. Content Article
    The Early Notifcation scheme is a national programme for the early reporting of infants born with a potential severe brain injury following term labour to NHS Resolution.  This leaflet has been produced as an overview to highlight the: key findings of the report six recommendations information on our collaborative partners and other resources available on our website including information on supporting staff and families.
  22. Content Article
    Six monthly summaries of how the NHS reviewed and responded to the patient safety issues you reported.
  23. Content Article
    Most healthcare professionals are familiar with Datix incident reporting software. But how and why has Datix become associated with fear and blame? Datix’s former chief executive and now chairman of Patient Safety Learning, Jonathan Hazan, looks at why this has come about and what needs to be done to improve incident reporting.
  24. Content Article
    As a healthcare worker, you could be asked to write a statement for an investigation at work, in response to a complaint, or about an unexpected incident. These are the main points to consider, developed by the Royal College of Nursing (RCN).
  25. Content Article
    Near miss events are much more common than events where harm actually reaches a patient, as much as 7-100 times more frequent. However, reporting systems for such events are much less common. At Faulkner Hospital, over 75% of the safety event reports the hospital captures in RL6 are near misses.
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