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Grant Award Recipients from Johns Hopkins University and University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing

BOSTON, MA (May 9, 2012) – The National Patient Safety Foundation (NPSF) today announced that it has awarded a total of $200,000 in grants for two innovative patient safety research projects. The grants are awarded through the NPSF Research Grants Program, which promotes studies leading to the prevention of human errors, system errors, patient injuries, and their consequences. Read More→

Patient Safety Is Everyone’s Work

On Apr 17, 2012 | Comments (1)
Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare | March/April 2012

NPSF President Diane C. Pinakiewicz, MBA, was recently interviewed by Susan Carr, editor of PSQH, to discuss NPSF activities, board certification in patient safety, patient engagement, and other topics relative to the state of patient safety. Read the full interview on the PSQH website or download a PDF version.

ASPPS e-News, April 2012

On Apr 05, 2012 | Comments (0)

 

In this issue

  • ASPPS Members In the News
  • Patient Safety In the News
  • April Webcast: Applying Human Factors Engineering and System Safety Approaches in Health Care
  • Patient Safety Awareness Week Recap
  • Patient Safety 365: 14th Annual NPSF Patient Safety Congress
  • Member Breakfast at Congress

...

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Human factors engineering is the application of knowledge regarding human characteristics to the design of work systems.

The Federal Aviation Administration, a leader in human factors engineering, defines human factors as “a multidisciplinary effort to generate and compile information about human capabilities and limitations and apply that information to equipment, systems, software, facilities, procedures, jobs, environments, training, staffing, and personnel management to produce safe, comfortable, and effective human performance.” Read More→

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ASPPS e-News, February 2012

On Mar 27, 2012 | Comments (0)

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U.S. News & World Report | March 23, 2012

Will patients soon be able to purchase medication over the counter that used to require a prescription? Read the full story on the U.S.News & World Report site.

 

Categories : NPSF in the News
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Let the Patient Help

On Mar 22, 2012 | Comments (0)
 2012 Professional Learning Series Webcast

Webcast held March 21, 1-2 pm EDT

Faculty:

Dave deBronkart (e-Patient Dave)
Blogger, Keynote Speaker, and Health Policy Adviser
Co-Chair, Society for Participatory Medicine Read More→

Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics at University of Illinois-Chicago Aims to Deliver Tools, Training, and Technology

A hospitalized patient receiving opioids for pain may have little in common with a patient in a primary care clinic who is struggling to control diabetes mellitus. Yet these vastly different clinical scenarios are similar in one significant way: In both cases, there is a strong risk that medication is not being optimally prescribed or taken, with the result being less-than-optimal outcomes and, perhaps, gaps in patient safety.

These problems are also part of the focus of a $4.25 million, five-year contract awarded last fall by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality as part of the Centers for Education and Research on Therapeutics (CERTs) program. Led by Bruce Lambert, PhD, professor of pharmacy administration and director of the CERT at the University of Illinois at Chicago, the Tools for Optimizing Medication Safety (TOP-MEDS) project has broad goals for improving the prescribing of opioids; reducing drug name confusion; enhancing post-marketing surveillance of adverse drug events; and improving patients’ understanding of and compliance with drug regimens. Read More→

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ASPPS Member Breakfast

On Mar 09, 2012 | Comments (0)
Patient Safety 365
14th Annual NPSF Patient Safety Congress

Members of the American Society of Professionals in Patient Safety are invited to a special Member Breakfast at the 14th Annual NPSF Patient Safety Congress, May 24, in Washington, DC, with members of the Lucian Leape Institute at NPSF:

Lucian Leape, MD, Chair, Lucian Leape Institute at NPSF, and Adjunct Professor of Health Policy Harvard School of Public Health

Paul O’Neill, Former Chairman and CEO, Alcoa, and 72nd Secretary of the US Treasury

Julianne Morath, RN, MS, Chief Quality & Patient Safety Officer, Vanderbilt University Medical Center

They will discuss with the membership their initiative focused on the health care workforce and the importance of restoring joy and meaning in work as well as focusing on workforce safety as a precondition to patient safety. As the ASPPS membership represents disciplines across the workforce committed to patient safety, the Leape Institute members are eager to hear from you.

ASPPS Members: If you were not able to attend Congress, or if you were there but missed the breakfast, you can still make your voice heard on these important issues. Take the Patient Safety Pulse member survey.

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This week, the National Patient Safety Foundation (also known as “@theNPSF”) held a Twitter chat in recognition of Patient Safety Awareness Week. Although our focus was patient engagement, the conversation took a few turns. In case you missed it, we’ve summarized some of the key points for you here.

Review an edited transcript (in reverse chronological order) [PDF format].

Communication

We shared a link to NPSF’s new video, which demonstrates the Ask Me 3 program in action, then asked, “What other questions can patients ask? Or what more can they do?” Among the suggestions:

  • Be sure to ask questions of all health providers, including pharmacists, infection control personnel, and others, not just your primary care providers.
  • Be sure questions are asked and answered, so they are fully understood.
  • Write questions down so you don’t forget them during the visit.
  • Take notes
  • Bring a “second set of ears”—a family member or friend who can help you remember everything.

One participant said, given how busy clinicians are, she is sometimes reluctant to ask too many question. That led to a discussion of time constraints in the modern health landscape. According to one participant, Jerome Groopman, MD, has estimated that doctors interrupt patients within the first 18 seconds of a visit.

We asked people to share some of their favorite videos or tools for patients. Not surprisingly, the AHRQ’s patient resource, Questions Are the Answer, was widely tweeted. Participants also shared information about medication safety and the safe disposal of prescription medication.

Health Literacy

We asked if low health literacy may be a reason for a lack of engagement by some patients. One participant shared a source that says 53 percent of adults have only intermediate levels of health literacy. Participants shared links to health literacy resources:

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation resources: http://t.co/OXZAHyTA

NPSF, Words to Watch: http://www.npsf.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/AskMe3_WordsToWatch_English.pdf

Also recommended by one participant: follow @Hlth_Literacy on twitter.

Raising Awareness

Of course, one of the major goals of Patient Safety Awareness Week is to raise awareness of the issue. Someone we follow, @SusanCarr, asked what people are reading this week, and that yielded links to great articles sparked by PSAW:

Informing the Journey, Not Changing the Destination by Jim Conway on the Health Care For All blog, http://t.co/P97dB0WS

@ClaudiaNichols writing for Pilot Health Advocates,  http://t.co/YDzSnzJV

 @TrishaTorrey writing on why the word “celebrate” is the wrong word for Patient Safety Awareness Week, http://t.co/ZcPSAJIR

Trisha Torrey rightly points out that “celebrating” is not really what the week is about. “Recognizing” or “commemorating” Patient Safety Awareness Week are probably better ways to think about it.

With that in mind, we want to make sure that everyone saves the date for next year: Patient Safety Awareness Week will be March 3-9, 2013.