Patient Safety Case Study
Patient Safety Case Study
Patient Safety Case Study
Week 9 – Assignment 1 Discussion Discussion Question 1: Patient Safety High-performing teams in healthcare organizations are the key to success in creating cultures of quality and safety. A high-performing team that works collaboratively enhances communication and patient safety. Healthcare teams that are not high performing and do not work well together are actually a liability in patient safety. For example, it is apparent to patients and their families when healthcare teams are not working collaboratively and communicating with each other. Kaiser Permanente has developed a framework of communication that healthcare staff can use to communicate about their patients, called the situation-background-assessment-recommendation (SBAR) technique (Institute for Healthcare Improvement, n.d.). This technique can be used to foster a culture of teamwork and patient safety. Using the readings for the week, the South University Online Library, and the Internet, respond to the following: Discuss the role of the nurse leader in fostering and promoting initiatives related to patient safety. Examine the relationship between patient safety and high-performing interprofessional healthcare teams. Discuss how the use of communication strategies like SBAR improves the high-performing interprofessional healthcare teams. Comment on the postings of at least two peers. Evaluation Criteria: Discussed the role of the nurse leader in fostering and promoting initiatives related to patient safety. Examined the relationship between patient safety and high-performing interprofessional healthcare teams. Discussed how the use of communication strategies like SBAR improves the high-performing interprofessional healthcare teams. Justified your answers with appropriate research and reasoning. Commented on the postings of at least two peers.Patient safety is a discipline that emphasizes safety in health care through the prevention, reduction, reporting, and analysis of medical error that often leads to adverse effects. The frequency and magnitude of avoidable adverse events experienced by patients was not well known until the 1990s, when multiple countries reported staggering numbers of patients harmed and killed by medical errors.[1] Recognizing that healthcare errors impact 1 in every 10 patients around the world, the World Health Organization calls patient safety an endemic concern.[2] Indeed, patient safety has emerged as a distinct healthcare discipline supported by an immature yet developing scientific framework. There is a significant transdisciplinary body of theoretical and research literature that informs the science of patient safety.[3