| Literature DB >> 33853658 |
D F Hunt1,2, J Bailey3, B R Lennox4,5, M Crofts4, C Vincent6,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Psychological safety-speaking up about ideas and concerns, free from interpersonal risk-are essential to the high-risk environment, such as healthcare settings. Psychologically safe working is particularly important in mental health where recovery-oriented approaches rely on collaborative efforts of interprofessional teams to make complex decisions. Much research focuses on antecedents and outcomes associated with psychological safety, but little focus on the practical steps for how to increase psychological safety across and at different levels of a healthcare organisation. AIMS: We explore how a mental health organisation creates an organisation-wide plan for building the foundations of mental health and how to enhance psychological safety.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33853658 PMCID: PMC8045992 DOI: 10.1186/s13033-021-00439-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Syst ISSN: 1752-4458
Implementing psychological safety at the individual, team, and organisation level
| Level | Description |
|---|---|
| Individual | Feel that it is safe to report near misses or errors, suggestions for improvement; and Feel able to engage in discussions regarding the duties of their job and duties beyond their role for the benefit of patients and service users Feel empowered to discuss possible improvements and conduct controlled experimentation |
| Team | Emphasise compassionate and collaborative working Empowered to challenge disruptive or uncivil behaviours Learning and implementing suggestions for improvement and near misses and/or errors Invite innovation and experimentally testing suggestions to promote changes to processes for the future |
| Organisation | Executive-level leadership modelling psychological safety with strategic focus and investment Provide opportunities for individuals to engage in support networks and interprofessional working Promote management styles that are collaborative and compassionate Policies and procedures that emphasise fairness Enable and incentivise opportunities for improvement across the organisation |
Techniques and practices to enable cultural and organisational change
| Intervention | Actions | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Organisational and leadership messaging | Create a communication strategy using multiple approaches to reach the whole workforce and the wider community. Strategies include sending letters and factsheets, and in-person roadshows | Letter and fact sheet campaign [ |
| Developing an organisational charter | Code of conducts can provide a framework for behavioural expectations. Codes of conduct offer the opportunity to embed behaviours taught in workshops and educational sessions (see below) into current practice | Team charter to empower teams [ |
| Mental health ethics committee | Open and accessible ethics committees provide objective and supportive scrutiny, particularly around explore complex dilemmas and experimenting with new approaches to patient care (i.e., service change and quality improvement) | Ethics committees and consultations [ |
| Dialogue meetings | Create a series of dialogue meetings to open up questions that are frequently either unanswered or unanswerable to generate open discussion on difficult topics in mental health | Opportunities to discuss complex dilemmas [ |
| Schwartz rounds | Provide interdisciplinary meetings for groups to discuss the emotional and social aspects of care with the purpose of providing safer patient care. It is led by a multidisciplinary panel who open with their experiences around a particular theme. Schwartz rounds are complementary to dialogue meetings, focusing on share experience and compassion instead of unearthing the thought processes regarding difficult situations | Schwartz rounds in mental health and community care [ |
| Staff engagement and action research groups | Town halls offer an opportunity to bring together representatives across the organisation to discuss psychological safety. Action research groups, allowing clinicians to act as researchers, calibrate approaches and share best practice | Staff engagement [ |
| Patient participatory councils | These groups provide an opportunity to bring professionals, managers and clinical and non-clinical staff together to ensure healthcare is patient-oriented and maximise patient involvement and choice | Patient engagement and participatory action research group [ |
| Skills workshops | Workshops and train the trainer workshops offer opportunities to bolster skills and embed this into practice by training champions | Train the trainer workshops [ |
| Simulation and role play | Utilising the role of simulated or unstructured role-play to explore complex scenarios in mental health in safe no-risk environments | Simulation [ |
| Video presentations and case studies | This approach provides teams with the time to self-reflect and reflects on everyday events that are complex and generally made under pressure | Video dramatisation of medical events [ |
Key target areas for psychological safety
| Situation | Description | Relevance of psychological safety | Example interventions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient admissions to a psychiatric hospital | Decisions to admit patients depend on system demands (both intra- and inter-organisational), patient presentation and capacity to consent to admission, country-specific legal frameworks and ward resources to care for the patient compassionately and safely. A patient-centred focus can leave nurses feeling that they must always admit patients, irrespective of resource levels, and do not have the opportunity to decline further admissions when they assess safety to be compromised | Psychologically safe teams can discuss decisions that could be viewed as incorrect, subversive or unhelpful and do not align with the intra- and inter- organisational demands, and individual desire to aid all patients. Not only will nurses be empowered to make the difficult decision to decline admission, but leadership will support these decisions | Daily or shift based patient flow meetings, and dialogue meetings to provide staff with the opportunity to openly discuss internal and external demand for capacity in their clinical areas, their concern for impact on standards of care, their compassion for the person needing admission, their safety-based decisions and calibrate these approaches Leadership training focused on the importance of making patient safety-focused decisions regarding admissions and empowering teams to decline further admissions when it is unsafe for patients and staff to increase care demands on the ward team |
| Involuntary admission to a psychiatric hospital | Most countries provide statutory powers to admit the most vulnerable into psychiatric inpatient services, and appropriate treatment that may arise from this decision. Involuntary inpatients can feel disempowered and this can potentially influence their recovery | Psychologically safe teams will recognise the importance of seeking shared decision-making with involuntary inpatients. These discussions should include discussing patient options, their preferences, and openly discussing their preferences set against what is possible and safe | Develop and implement a new structured induction plan (or refining an existing one) for all involuntary admissions that focus on patient choice Communication training that specifically focuses on negotiating with patients and factors in patient preference against what is feasible for their safety |
| Decisions to use pro-active intervention | In acute inpatient settings, these situations are the precursor to restrictive practice, such as discussing and debriefing patients, providing an opportunity to support them in de-escalating a situation In community settings, these situations may include introducing a pharmaceutical or therapeutic intervention to help stabilise a patient and avoid admission to a psychiatric hospital | Psychologically safe teams in acute inpatient care (particularly with nursing and practitioner teams) will actively seek to discuss and take action to de-escalate volatile situations, providing support in these actions and not avoiding them In community settings, psychologically safe teams will involve all relevant professionals, informal support and the patient in openly discussing intervention options available to provide patient-centred care | Dialogue meetings provide opportunities for teams to discuss these difficult decisions and their thought processes, relating to previous experiences Schwartz rounds provide an opportunity for staff to discuss the emotional components of complex decision-making, particularly balancing patient safety and privacy Simulations and role-play provide an opportunity for teams to enhance psychological safety behaviours such as team decision-making, diverse thinking, teamwork and speaking up to deliver patient-focused care. Simulations should also include shared decision-makers with key stakeholders beyond the team (e.g., informal support, non-statutory organisations). Most importantly, involving the patient in shared decision-making, both in terms of keeping them informed, providing patient choice and negotiating patient preference with patient safety considerations Debriefing teams to explicitly discuss thought processes and factors relating to positive risk-taking behaviour. Alongside this, modelling thoughtful risk-taking behaviour from leaders, including a protocol to consider all factors |
| Decisions to use restrictive practice in acute inpatient settings | Across acute inpatient settings, decisions on the use of restrictive practice (e.g., enhanced observations, seclusion, restraint, and sedation) are often time-pressured and involved complex decision-making, making a trade-off between patient safety and privacy. As such, these decisions require input from all key decision-makers and influencers to make the most informed choice | Teams that are high in psychological safety will be able to speak up and voice their considerations and possibly their concerns on the use of restrictive practice, including challenging the decisions made by others in a collaborative way. As well as speaking up, psychological safety teams will include all members participating in the decision-making process, and ensure full patient involvement | |
| Reducing restrictive practice in acute inpatient settings | Related to the decision to use restrictive practice is to de-escalate or end restrictive practice with a patient. This involves testing whether a patient is able to manage without the imposed restraints. It requires positive risk-taking behaviour to increase patient privacy but not at the expense of the safety of the patient and others | Psychologically safe teams support and collaboratively challenge each other when it comes to patient-focused and positive risk-taking (i.e., experimenting whether a patient can manage without an environmental restraint). Utilising whole team intelligence, full patient involvement (both in terms of informing the patient and discussing the available options) and knowledge sharing enhances the decision-making, mitigates foreseen risks and encourages taking positive risks that benefit the patient | |
| Authorising leave or time away from the ward in acute inpatient settings | As part of a recovery-oriented approach, many patients have planned leave or time away from the ward in the context of the legal framework under which they were admitted to hospital. This positive risk-taking requires ward teams to balance the often complex dynamic between patient autonomy and organisational/societal paternalism | ||
| Post-incident debrief/discussion for the use of restrictive practice | Across many countries, debriefing is a mandatory (and legally required) to analyse and discuss all circumstances leading to the decision to use restrictive practice | A psychologically safe team can have candid discussions regarding the use of restraint, even when this practice was not optimal the optimal decision for the patient (e.g., low staffing levels creating a need to use more restrictive practice). These teams should also be able to collaboratively discuss any disagreements regarding decisions made, in retrospect Teams will also seek patient involvement and family/carer involvement (where applicable) in individual cases, to reflect on the decision made, discuss the reasons why they were made, and actively seek a collaboration to explore alternative options and strategies for avoiding using restrictive practice, where possible | Training provided to teams that support speaking up candidly and communication styles to reflect collaborative rather than combative debate Organisational policies in place to fairly audit non-optimal decisions regarding restrictive practice, fairly and holistically Train and simulate shared decision-making approaches, inclusive of patients in these discussions |
| Planned discharge from a psychiatric hospital | The transition from inpatient to the community can be a difficult inpatients, particularly for patients with long lengths of stay | A psychologically safe approach to the transition in care between inpatient and community settings will involve the patient in discussing the plan, openly and actively listening to any concerns the patient may have, and to ensure continuity of care between inpatient and community teams Involving all relevant statutory and non-statutory organisations, and informal support in the planned discharge | Dialogue meetings and reflective sessions to understand the barriers and discuss ways of ensuring continuity of care for this transition period Mapping and refining the transition aspect of a care pathway to ensure full patient involvement and involvement of relevant services and informal support |
| Decisions regarding particularly vulnerable groups | Decisions regarding the care of vulnerable groups such as older people and young people require collaboration between clinician’s informal support and the views of the person themselves. In particular, the process of making decisions regarding the care provided by carers, partners, family and friends vs what professional assessment determines to be the best approach This should also include other statutory and non-statutory organisations that are involved in supporting the patient As such, patient-centred care often crosses professional and organisational boundaries, requiring open and candid communication for inter-professional working, and shared decision-making that involve patients and their informal support network | Safe patient-focused care relies on the continuity of care and collaboration between professional services and other statutory and non-statutory organisations (e.g., charity-sector organisations involved in supporting a patient); and informal support provided by carers, friends and family. Psychological safe teams can engage in supportive and candid discussions between formal and informal care to agree to care packages that are always in the interests of the patient | Engagement strategies and training that bring together formal and informal support to integrate and create continuity of care—providing opportunities for people to speak up about parameters, opportunities and challenges to providing care |
| Clinical handover | The definition of clinical handovers is the transfer of clinical responsibility and accountability of some or all aspects of care for a patient or group of patients to another person. Functional handovers underpin consistent and continuity of care. In the case of an inpatient setting, this handover will typically be at the end of one shift pattern to the beginning of another. Handovers should include enough information to plan for the next shift compassionately and safely | As such, teams that are high in psychological safety will be able to have candid and pro-active discussions that could aid the effective care of particular patients. For example, speaking up about some of the behavioural difficulties with one patient may provide insight that helps to avoid an aggressive situation later that day | Create a research action team with key decision-makers (clinical and non-clinical staff) across the Trust to map how handover process and discuss restructuring it with a focus on psychological safety |
| Informal disputes between staff members | Providing opportunities and structure to handling disputes between staff members is essential to resolving disputes before they reach formal grievance procedures | Psychologically safe teams provide an opportunity for staff members to have candid conversations about professional conflicts and seek opportunities to resolve such issues successfully. In particular, a focus on understanding each other’s view and recognising commonalities in occupational practice. Where possible, staff should take opportunities to take ownership of the issue and seek to resolve it in an appositive manner At an organisational level, there should be structure and opportunities to facilitate staff resolving such issues at the early stages | Specific training provided to staff members and, in particular, to leaders to help mediate and resolve disputes and conflicts. Training should also focus on respectful listening and divergent thinking Organisations may seek to provide mediation from internally-appointed individuals or external services to facilitate pro-actively handling disputes |
| Workplace bullying and harassment | Individuals who misuse their authority to gain personal and political power, and ultimately undermine a psychologically safe culture At a group level, informal peer support networks are beneficial in a workplace setting, they can also serve as cliques, creating favouritism for those within the group and exclusion for those outside of the group | Psychologically safe teams create professional boundaries, understanding the difference between their professional and personal lives. Irrespective of informal relationships, colleagues still foster a relationship of candid discussion that is equal across all colleagues. When witnessing bullying and harassment, they are openly willing to challenge this behaviour and follow through with any action arising from the incident | Creating a code of conduct in which team expectations are agreed upon, laid out and repeatedly reinforced Policies that protect and support those who are implicated in bullying and harassment incidents, both for the person who reports the incident and the implicated staff Leadership training with a specific focus on handling bullying and harassment, from proactive strategies to promote candid but fair conversations, to handling grievances arising from this any reported incidents |
| Grievance procedures | All organisations have formal positions in place to handle grievances, whether they are through internal HR processes or whether they involve independent union organisations | Psychologically safe teams will be able to have candid conversations about any dispute or differences in personality or workplace differences that, in most cases, can be resolved before reaching formal stages | Providing independent and informal routes specifically designed to work towards resolving grievances collaboratively. Creating local charters with expectations for staff to openly, candidly and respectively discussing grievances before they escalate to formal stages |
| Professional Development Review (PDR) | Professional development reviews (PDR) provide opportunities for both the staff and the managers to reflect on performance from the previous year as well as plans for the next year. It provides opportunities to engage in short-term planning for role fulfilment and long-term career aspirations and how the organisation may play a part in this | Those who are psychologically safe will be free to engage in candid conversations regarding where they want to be in their position and will facilitate their engagement. The PDR should primarily seek to serve and develop the individual, and for organisational performance viewed as a secondary focus. It can provide opportunities for staff to discuss how the role fits with their current career aspirations and how this fits with the current role and what the organisation needs | Review of current PDR across the organisation and interviews to discuss whether staff the plans reflect their true aspirations, goals and plans |
| Return to work interviews | Return to work interviews are short, informal meetings held with an employee on their return to work after an absence. As well as discussing details around the absence and the planned return to work, it provides an opportunity to explore any work-placed contributions | Psychological safe individuals will be able to speak candidly around any work-related stress that contributed to their absence. Receptive managers will be able to respond to these concerns and, where possible, provide a return to work plan that takes into account the contributions to absence | Specific training that focuses on psychologically safe behaviours enabling collaborative discussion about the current absence, broader influences, and candidly discussing next steps |
| Exit interviews | Exit interviews create an invaluable opportunity to find out whether any of the reasons staff leave is attributable to the organisation. On a population level, they also offer opportunities to recognise trends and areas that may be improved to increase staff retention and engagement | Even when leaving, employees may feel like they are unable to speak freely about the reasons they are leaving—fear of not receiving a good reference further influences whether people speak up. Individuals high in psychological safety are likely to speak more frankly about their experience and can offer critical insights for an organisation. Like PDRs, an exit interview should seek to serve the individual, first and foremost, and to provide open opportunities for organisational learning | Develop and implement a process to thematically analyse patterns for people leaving and how this is fed back into the organisation—alongside this, messaging that feedback received is valuable and actioned |
| Assemble a small team to conduct the mapping exercise and will have access to key contacts within the organisation | |
| Establish a small steering group to guide the parameters of this mapping exercise, the ambitions and criteria for success | |
| Agree on an operational definition to identify what is a psychologically safe practice and what is not | |
| Establish a series of workshops, focus groups and interviews to explore current experience and perceptions of psychological safety with patients, families and staff | |
| Review relevant documents and procedures which may either support or detract from psychological safety | |
| Review training programmes, induction and other initiative both in terms of their ethos and content concerning psychological safety | |
| To establish a baseline measurement of psychological safety across the organisation |
| 1. Select and engage a core group of key influencers in the organisation to lay out a strategic plan with the core columns of psychologically safe practice. Pillars for ultimate outcomes and cross-cutting themes for the requirements to achieve these outcomes. A visual representation of this is below: | |
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| 2. Support and commitment to psychologically safe practice from the organisation to their workforce. This approach includes communicating this commitment to the workforce and the wider community, solidifying the organisational commitment to psychological safety to the proposed strategic plan | |
3. Leadership messaging to model psychological safety and focus on the following topics: (a) Discussing the importance of reporting failures and benefits from focusing on quality improvement. Providing empirical substantiation to create an impetus for change (b) Discuss the collective responsibility of staff to speak up when delivering safe patient care and areas that can be improved, including plans to make the process of reporting fair and straightforward. This can also include actively congratulating and even rewarding these actions, where appropriate (c) Discuss personal experiences of occupational failure and what learned lessons from these experiences. This will serve to make failure an acceptable and model that it is acceptable and is part of occupational development (d) Discuss previous difficulties in speaking up to senior colleagues, lessons learned and the importance of speaking up and shared decision-making within and between teams and professions | |
| 4. Create a code of conduct to set expectations for how people should act with each other and instil the values of psychological safety, including open and candid discussions, balanced with compassion and fairness: respectful listening and collaborative debate, all with the focus on providing safe and optimum patient care | |
5. Forums and structured discussions for intra- and inter-professional groups to discuss challenges and opportunities in mental health practice. These could provide opportunities to: (a) Create a series of groups that target particular professions, services or problems related to psychological safety. Each group should include an appropriate sponsor who will commit to championing actions arising from these discussions (b) Discuss the collective responsibility of staff to speak up when delivering safe patient care and areas that can be improved. Crucially, these discussions should directly feedback into the organisation and take an action research approach to create improvements from these discussions (c) Provide opportunities to discuss complex decision-making and inform action research that involves staff in co-designing interventions to enhance behaviours relating to psychologically safe practice | |
| 6. Provide training that focuses on psychologically safe behaviours and practice. These include speaking up and voice behaviours, autonomy, respectful listening, collaborative working, advocacy enquiry and collaborative debate | |
| 7. Create medical, educational interventions that allow teams to practice psychologically safe practice in clinical and non-clinical situations. These can include simulating high-pressured situations such as aggressive and violent patients |