SAFER HEALTHCARE

SAFER HEALTHCARE. STRATEGIES FOR THE REAL WORLD

Editorial:
SPRINGER
Año de edición:
ISBN:
978-3-319-25557-6
Páginas:
157
N. de edición:
1
Idioma:
Inglés
Ilustraciones:
12
Disponibilidad:
Disponible en 2-3 semanas

Descuento:

-5%

Antes:

51,99 €

Despues:

49,39 €

The authors of this book set out a system of safety strategies and interventions for managing patient safety on a day-to-day basis and improving safety over the long term. These strategies are applicable at all levels of the healthcare system from the frontline to the regulation and governance of the system.
There have been many advances in patient safety, but we now need a new and broader vision that encompasses care throughout the patient’s journey. The authors argue that we need to see safety through the patient’s eyes, to consider how safety is managed in different contexts and to develop a wider strategic and practical vision in which patient safety is recast as the management of risk over time. Most safety improvement strategies aim to improve reliability and move closer toward optimal care. However, healthcare will always be under pressure and we also require ways of managing safety when conditions are difficult. We need to make more use of strategies concerned with detecting, controlling, managing and responding to risk. Strategies for managing safety in highly standardised and controlled environments are necessarily different from those in which clinicians constantly have to adapt and respond to changing circumstances.

Authors
•René Amalberti is 61 years old, Prof. Medicine, MD, PhD. After a residency in Psychiatry, he integrated the Airforce in 1977, got a permanent Military Research position in 1982, and became Professor of Medicine in 1995. He retired in 2007 and is now Senior advisor Patient Safety at the HAS (Haute Autorité de Santé) and Chief scientific officer of the French association La Prévention Médicale. He has published over 100 international papers, and authored or co-authored 10 books on human error and system safety (last Navigating safety, Springer, 2013).
•Charles Vincent trained as a Clinical Psychologist and since 1985 has carried out research on the causes of harm to patients, the consequences for patients and staff and methods of improving the safety of healthcare. He was Professor of Psychology at University College London before moving to the Department of Surgery and Cancer at Imperial College in 2002 where he directed the Imperial Centre for Patient Safety & Service Quality. He is the editor of Clinical Risk Management (BMJ Publications, 2nd edition, 2001), author of Patient Safety (2ned edition 2010) and author of many papers on medical error, risk and patient safety. He is currently a Health Foundation Fellow and Professor of Psychology at the University of Oxford

Contents
Progress and Challenges for Patient Safety.
The Ideal and the Real.
Approaches to Safety. One Size Does not Fit All.
Seeing Safety Through the Patient’s Eyes.
The Consequences for Incident Analysis.
Strategies for Safety.
Safety Strategies in Hospitals.
Safety Strategies for Care in the Home.
Safety Strategies in Primary Care.
New challenges for Patient Safety.
A compendium of safety strategies and interventions.
Managing risk in the real world.