Literature DB >> 15867408

Five system barriers to achieving ultrasafe health care.

René Amalberti1, Yves Auroy, Don Berwick, Paul Barach.   

Abstract

Although debate continues over estimates of the amount of preventable medical harm that occurs in health care, there seems to be a consensus that health care is not as safe and reliable as it might be. It is often assumed that copying and adapting the success stories of nonmedical industries, such as civil aviation and nuclear power, will make medicine as safe as these industries. However, the solution is not that simple. This article explains why a benchmarking approach to safety in high-risk industries is needed to help translate lessons so that they are usable and long lasting in health care. The most important difference among industries lies not so much in the pertinent safety toolkit, which is similar for most industries, but in an industry's willingness to abandon historical and cultural precedents and beliefs that are linked to performance and autonomy, in a constant drive toward a culture of safety. Five successive systemic barriers currently prevent health care from becoming an ultrasafe industrial system: the need to limit the discretion of workers, the need to reduce worker autonomy, the need to make the transition from a craftsmanship mindset to that of equivalent actors, the need for system-level (senior leadership) arbitration to optimize safety strategies, and the need for simplification. Finally, health care must overcome 3 unique problems: a wide range of risk among medical specialties, difficulty in defining medical error, and various structural constraints (such as public demand, teaching role, and chronic shortage of staff). Without such a framework to guide development, ongoing efforts to improve safety by adopting the safety strategies of other industries may yield reduced dividends. Rapid progress is possible only if the health care industry is willing to address these structural constraints needed to overcome the 5 barriers to ultrasafe performance.

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15867408     DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-142-9-200505030-00012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-4819            Impact factor:   25.391


  61 in total

1.  Use of the WHO surgical safety checklist in trauma and orthopaedic patients.

Authors:  Mathew Sewell; Miriam Adebibe; Prakash Jayakumar; Charlie Jowett; Kin Kong; Krishna Vemulapalli; Brian Levack
Journal:  Int Orthop       Date:  2010-08-21       Impact factor: 3.075

2.  Whole body imaging in the diagnosis of blunt trauma, ionizing radiation hazards and residual risk.

Authors:  J P Kepros; R C Opreanu; R Samaraweera; A Briningstool; C A Morrison; B D Mosher; P Schneider; P Stevens
Journal:  Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg       Date:  2012-07-12       Impact factor: 3.693

3.  Persistence of unsafe practice in everyday work: an exploration of organizational and psychological factors constraining safety in the operating room.

Authors:  S Espin; L Lingard; G R Baker; G Regehr
Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care       Date:  2006-06

Review 4.  Design of high reliability organizations in health care.

Authors:  J S Carroll; J W Rudolph
Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care       Date:  2006-12

5.  Building safer systems by ecological design: using restoration science to develop a medication safety intervention.

Authors:  P B Marck; J A Kwan; B Preville; M Reynes; W Morgan-Eckley; R Versluys; L Chivers; B O'Brien; J Van der Zalm; M Swankhuizen; S R Majumdar
Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care       Date:  2006-04

6.  An unintended consequence of CPOE implementation: shifts in power, control, and autonomy.

Authors:  Joan S Ash; Dean F Sittig; Emily Campbell; Kenneth Guappone; Richard H Dykstra
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2006

7.  High reliability versus high autonomy: Dryden, Murphy and patient safety.

Authors:  Robert G Evans; Karen Cardiff; Sam Sheps
Journal:  Healthc Policy       Date:  2006-05

8.  Counterheroism, common knowledge, and ergonomics: concepts from aviation that could improve patient safety.

Authors:  Geraint H Lewis; Rhema Vaithianathan; Peter M Hockey; Guy Hirst; James P Bagian
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 4.911

9.  Use of electronic medical record-enhanced checklist and electronic dashboard to decrease CLABSIs.

Authors:  Natalie M Pageler; Christopher A Longhurst; Matthew Wood; David N Cornfield; Jaap Suermondt; Paul J Sharek; Deborah Franzon
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2014-02-24       Impact factor: 7.124

10.  A work time study analysing differences in resource use between psychiatric inpatients.

Authors:  Jan Wolff; Paul McCrone; Mathias Berger; Anita Patel; Christian Ackermann; Katja Gerhardt; Claus Normann
Journal:  Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol       Date:  2015-03-13       Impact factor: 4.328

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