Reclaiming the systems approach to paediatric safety A study enhancing safety in delivery of children's care
Funded by
20 November 2019
Published journal: Archives of Disease in Childhood from The British Medical Journal
Introduction
Prior to the emergence of the patient safety movement as a distinct science, it was assumed that the safety of patients was an outcome of good professional acumen, and that if healthcare providers could individually perform well then their patients would remain safe at all times.
It is now 20 years since the publication of To Err is Human the first major review of healthcare safety in the USA. In the UK, the publication Organisation with a Memory in 2000 supported the view that patient safety required a wider system approach. Both documents reframed safety and error in healthcare as an organisational or system issue rather than one of individual error, whether of omission or of commission. Over the past 20 years, there has been major progress in the understanding of patient safety and the complexity of the systems involved in providing healthcare. In a recent review of the state of patient safety in 2018, Bates and Singh conclude that ‘Highly effective interventions have since been developed and adopted for hospital-acquired infections and medication safety, although the impact of these interventions varies because of their inconsistent implementation and practice’
Within paediatrics, the National Patient Safety Agency made the first attempt in the UK to detail the extent of healthcare-derived harm among children. The problems identified remain a challenge—namely communication, deterioration, delayed or missed diagnosis, infections and medication harm. This is despite well-tested theories and interventions being available for many of these. In this paper, we explore the theories of patient safety and provide principles to tackle the challenge ahead.
Citation
Cheung R, Roland D, Lachman P, Reclaiming the systems approach to paediatric safety, Archives of Disease in Childhood 2019;104:1130-1133.
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