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The gaps within, and future directions for, patient safety research. Prof Justin Waring, Nottingham University Business School Making Healthcare Safer, St Andrew’s University. Patient Safety: looking back, looking forwards. We have thrown a lot at patient safety!!! Research
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The gaps within, and future directions for, patient safety research Prof Justin Waring, Nottingham University Business School Making Healthcare Safer, St Andrew’s University
Patient Safety: looking back, looking forwards • We have thrown a lot at patient safety!!! • Research • Patient Safety Research Portfolio • Patient Safety and Service Quality Centres • Policy & Regulation • National Patient Safety Agency • World Alliance for Patient Safety • Practice • National Reporting and Learning System • Patient Safety First; 1000 Lives; Health Foundation • But, have we seen the system-wide improvements hoped for?
Patient Safety: looking back, looking forwards • The story so far… • Chapter 1 – understand the scale of the problem • Chapter 2 – understand the sources of the problem • Chapter 3 – understand & evaluate the answers to the problem • New ways of thinking about the problem • Complexity of healthcare organisation & practice • Knowledge, Culture, Power • Neglected or forgotten areas of research & practice • The positive contributions to safety • Emotion • Professional networks • Organisational complexity and spaces between care processes
Chapter 1: Understand the scale of the problem • What is the scale of the problem? • E.g. Harvard Medical Practice Study • Where is it happening? • Identify common events or situations • What are the different types? • Develop taxonomies of diagnostic, treatment, management errors, etc • Key activities • Case reviews, significant event audits • Early reporting & risk management systems
Chapter 2: Understand the causes of the problem • Re-conceptualisation of safety & risk • Human Factors & Ergonomics • Active risks • Individual & Group Behaviours • Latent Factors • Organisational complexity • Environmental Factors • Culture & Resources • Risks and faults in existing systems • Failure to think in terms of systems • Blame Culture • Lack of systematic learning
Chapter 3: Understanding & Evaluating the solutions • ‘Hard’ technological Interventions • ICTs to facilitate communication, monitoring & checking • Pharmaceutical & Medical Device, e.g. SUDs • Process & Activity Interventions • Alerts & Safety Notices • Guidelines & Checklists, e.g. Safe Surgery Saves Lives • ‘Soft’ skills & competency based Interventions • Culture change – Safety training • Leadership development • Organisational Learning Interventions • Reporting & Learning Systems • Knowledge & Risk Management
Important Developments • Theory & Conceptualisations • Active & Latent Factors • Systems Thinking • Methodologies and Methods • Case Reviews • Observational techniques • Measuring safety cultures/climates • Evaluating technological change • Formative and Summative findings • Evidence of change & Improvement • Evidence of culture change • But is it enough? Are we learning? Have we missed things out?
A ‘measure & manage’ orthodoxy? • Threats to safety are amenable to objective & scientific measurement • Does this acknowledge the complexity of organisational life? • Is there sufficient ‘depth’ to measurement & analysis? • Reification & Reductionism • Treats knowledge & culture as abstract variables • Underplays the dynamics of power and control • Problems in the introduction of safety interventions • Reporting systems • Culture change • Safety Interventions • Its about context!!! • Where do safety events come from? • What inhibits safety improvement?
Three critical perspectives? • Knowledge • Knowledge about safety is both ‘slippery’ and ‘sticky’ • E.g. barriers to reporting • Culture • Cultures are not things to be managed, but are lived and breathed in day-to-day work • E.g. normalisation of risk • Power & Organisation • Power & Resistance to change can stymie service improvement • E.g. resistance to checklists or guidelines • Critical of and extend orthodox thinking, critical for service improvement
The next steps for patient safety research • Thinking ‘outside the box’? • Patient safety is not simply a clinical problem, nor is it a problem of ergonomics or Human Factors • Recognise complexity of social and organisational life • Emotions • Relations & Networks • Tribes & Cultures • Organisational & Institutional risks • Partnerships & engagements • Work with clinicians and service leaders • Encourage those on the front line to lead patient safety • More bottom-up, less top-down? • But avoid dualisms of professionalism/managerialism
A new menu for patient safety research? • Sense-making and how safety is perceived ‘on the ground’ • Communities of Practice and learning from mistakes • Identity & Belonging in the face of safety events • Rituals & Responsibilities for safety • Jurisdiction & Legitimacy to enact change • Knowledge about safety and its relations of power
Four Gaps in patient safety research & policy • 1. Thinking about the sources of safety • Learning from what works • 2. Thinking about the role of professional-practice networks • How clinicians interact and learn from one another to deliver a service • 3. Thinking about the role of emotion • How clinicians respond and cope in the face of safety events • 4. Thinking about the threats to safety between care processes • A truly inter-organisational, systemic and institutional approach to safety
1. Thinking about the sources of safety • Conventional focus on what fails and why • Ethos of ‘Learning from mistakes’ • Incident reporting, RCA and error-chains etc • Deficit model of safety! • But what happens when this go right? • Reason’s Organisation Safety Model • Factors that shape both failure AND resilience • Systems that help organisations navigate the risks and encourage safety • We can also learn from ‘what works’ • What promotes resilience in the face of systemic risk?
Exnovation & Patient Safety • Make visible what is already present • If innovation is about novelty, exnovation is about understanding what already happens • “The process of making existing strength of practices explicit by mapping the tacit resources of practitioners” (Jessica Mesman) • Spatiality and Temporality in neonatal ICU (Mesman) • Time/space infrastructure and trajectories on which safe practices can unfold • Hidden structures of effective clinical practice • Capabilities and Creativity of clinicians • Collaborative actions & teamwork • Diagnostic work & Problem-solving
Examples of safety supporting practices • Fire-fighting & creativity in the operating theatre • Rescue safe working despite system failures • Accommodate and Innovate in response to system failure • ‘Going the extra-mile’ • Personal sacrifice for service consistency • ‘Small cogs’ • Junior members of staff who ensure consistency and safety of practice • Problem-solving at the coal face • Corridor committees & watercooler learning • Importance of professional-practice networks
Valuing ‘what works’ in patient safety • Maintaining safety when things spiral out of control • Extra effort required by clinicians to compensate for latent risks • Hidden and adaptive coping strategies • Heroic work!?! • Normalises the idea that clinicians can cope • Plastering over the cracks in the system – lack of systems thinking • More blame when things do go wrong • Razor’s edge of safety!!! • Promotes patient safety • Conceals underlying risks and limits learning • Future research ideas • The relationships between active & latent sources of safety & risk
2. Thinking about Professional Practice Networks • Patient Safety interventions often create new working practices or organisational systems • Guidelines & checklists • Improved teamwork & communication • Formal reports systems • Established professional groupings inhibit safety • Silos, epistemic communities & knowledge hoarding • Cultural bias of professional interests above the patient interest • But this might neglect the role that ‘natural networks’ • Knowledge sharing • Problem-solving • Learning and development • Not necessarily the answer, but might be source of resilience
Networks in the organisation & delivery of healthcare • Health services are produced “by webs of humans connected personally via technologies, interacting in multiple ways” (Braithwaite) • Communities of Practice (Lave and Wenger) • High-trust & mutuality • Shared understanding & knowledge • Common forms of identification & belonging • Intra- and Inter-professional networks • Often reinforce boundaries, but research shows how & why boundaries are crossed within the networks • Contributions to patient safety • Active problem-solving & Learning • Intrinsic appeal to members
Network Attributes & Qualities • A messy picture of organisational and clinical practice! • The building blocks for shared values, ideas and practices • Where issues of safety & resilience are enacted • Core & Periphery groups • Core staff (nurses) more likely to share knowledge & engage in problem-solving • The importance of daily contact and occupational background • Between groups interaction • Common where clinicians work side-by-side & functional proximity • Problem-centred & relative interactions • The role of boundary spanners and brokers • Managers & leaders have important hub and brokering roles
Qualitative accounts of problem-solving interactions • Knowledge sharing routinely occurs ‘at the backstage’ • Small chats • Corridor conversations • Coffee room banter • Informal knowledge sharing is embedded in practice • Shared or common understanding • Links to work activities • Translates quickly into decision-making & problem-solving • But it is not necessarily the answer • Can lack critical reflection, systems-thinking or deeper analysis • Limits system-wide learning • Can hoard knowledge
The importance of professional-practice networks • Networks and learning • Knowledge is often shared rapidly and easily within close networks • Problem solving close to the action • A significant source of resilience • Harness not replace networks • How can they be used further to engender learning or culture change • Safety solutions from networks • Future research: • How they can be used to disseminate & translate knowledge into practice • Networks and emotions
3. Emotional aspects of patient safety • Blame is a prominent issue in patient safety policy & research • Clinicians held to account for individual failure • Regulatory and disciplinary systems lack systems thinking • Encourages clinicians to conceal mistakes • But there is more to emotion • Inherent feature of clinical practice and patient harm • Complex and diverse expressions of emotion • Calls for more subtle and delicate forms of management • A Complex Sorrow (Paget) • Phenomenology of safety events • A desire that things had turned out differently • Clinicians need to learn to cope with failure
Models & Approaches to emotional research • Not individual reactions, but grounded in shared expectations and values • Plutchiks psycho-evolutionary theory • Stimuli • Cognition • Physical reaction • Emotional reaction • Behaviour • Emotional labour • Emotional intelligence
Emotions in the context of patient safety • Surprise • “I didn’t expect that” – “What just happened” • Safety events uncertain & unexpected • Sadness • Physical reactions of crying and distress • “Let the patient down” ~ let themselves down? • Anger • Physical and emotional outbursts • Blame or vent frustration with others • Anticipation and Optimism • “The save” – got away with that one • Things might get better - reporting
The importance of emotion • Impact of emotion • On clinicians • On service • On learning • The importance of professional-practice networks • Shared experience & understanding • Cathartic outlets • Trust and Psychological safety • Future research: • Attention to emotional labour in the context of patient safety • Attention to emotional intelligence of service leaders
4. The spaces between care processes • Patient safety research has tended to be narrow in focus • The operating theatre OR emergency room OR care home • The use of SUDs, guidelines, or training interventions • The Human Factors orthodox can limit analytical focus • Should focus on latent system factors • But often stops at local environmental or team factors • Risks located between care processes and spaces • Between professional groups • Between care organisations • Between sectors • Latent factors are often rooted at this wider institutional level
The inter-organisational dimension • Healthcare processes are often long & complex (esp. chronic care) • Primary, secondary and specialist care services • Pharmacists, therapists and support workers • Ambulance and transport • Home and social care services • The interaction and coordination of these elements is essential for efficient and safe healthcare (Audit Commission) • Various activities to promote inter-agency working • Mandated networks (cancer services) • MDTs (children’s safeguarding) • ICT and communication media (prescribing) • New guidelines and procedures (ESD)
The example of hospital discharge • The problem of hospital discharge • 7-8% of all reported patient incidents related to hospital discharge (massive under-estimate!) • Notifying external agencies most common issue • Common risks • Falls associated with inappropriate home adjustments • Medication associated with failure to communicate with GPs • Personal care, sores & ulcers associated with failure to arrange social care services • Communication, Knowledge sharing & Shared decision-making • Need to identify and understand various stakeholders • Determine barriers associated with differences in knowledge, culture and service organisation
Getting to the complex roots of patient safety • Getting to the roots of patient safety • Go beyond local environment or team factors • Understand role of managerial, organisational and policy factors • Need to consider how services are configured at system-level • Inter-organisational • Inter-sectoral • The role of various agencies with different commercial, professional and political influences • Institutional sources of risk and safety • The regulatory, normative and cognitive context • The role of institutional actors in making change happen!
Conclusions • Patient Safety research and practice has come a long way! • Significant advances in theory, methods and practice • But need to look to new models and approaches • Go beyond the Human Factors orthodox • Look at forgotten or neglected issues, e.g. Emotion & networks • Where’s the patient in patient safety? • The importance of context • What are the institutional and organisational constraints? • End dualisms: • Not a return to professionalism, or more management!!! • Learning from what works in healthcare practice and looking at change from within rather than from above