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Fostering a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment

Fostering a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment. Presentation Outline. Culture of Safety for Health Care Workers How to Create a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment Providing and Maintaining Safe Patient Care Environments Knowledge Transfer

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Fostering a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment

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  1. Fostering a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment

  2. Presentation Outline • Culture of Safety for Health Care Workers • How to Create a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment • Providing and Maintaining Safe Patient Care Environments • Knowledge Transfer • Staff Buy-In & Management/Leadership Support

  3. What Do Effective Safety Cultures Have in Common? • Corporate Culture demonstrates a constant commitment to safety as a top-level priority. • This attitude permeates the entire organization. • There are common components….

  4. What Do Effective Safety Cultures Have in Common? Common Components • Acknowledgement of the high risk, error-prone nature of the organization’s activities • Blame-free environment – employees can report errors or close calls w/out punishment • Expectations of collaboration across ranks to seek solutions to vulnerabilities • Willingness on the part of the organization to direct resources to address safety concerns • Provision of a SafeWork Environment

  5. What is ‘Culture’? “Culture is patterns of behavior that are acquired and transmitted by symbols created by humans, including their embodiments in artifacts. The essential core of culture consists of traditional ideas and their attached values. (Kroeber & Kluckhorn, 1952)

  6. Culture is... • Learned • Shared • Contains multiple facets Language Social Interaction Artifacts Material Life Values Knowledge Transfer Mechanisms

  7. The Culture of Safetyfor Health Care Workers Language: The way our culture is described. Injury/accident vs Safety and Minimizing Risk Artifacts: Equipment/Technology used Outdated lifting equipment vs state-of-the art equipment

  8. The Culture of Safetyfor Health Care Workers Socialinteraction: How members interact. Top down approach vs employee empowerment Caring for patients according to safety guidelines vs co-workers guided by a collective and joint belief in the importance of safety, with the shared understanding that every member upholds the group's safety norms

  9. The Culture of Safetyfor Health Care Workers Values:Productivity vs maintaining a safe environment of care Material Life:Procurement of equipment by purchasing department vs active involvement of front line workers in choice of equipment

  10. The Culture of Safetyfor Health Care Workers Knowledge Transfer: The sharing of common knowledge - what we learn in doing our work (Dixon 2000). Following procedures and policies vs utilizing employees’ knowledge of their jobs

  11. The Culture of Safetyfor Health Care Workers What differences are seen in a Culture of Safety and a Culture of Blame?

  12. Judging vs Exploring Showing emotion vs Remaining calm Reacting to what vs Finding out exactly you think happened what happened Blaming people for vs Focusing on the processgetting it wrong that allowed mistake to happen Blame and Gain Behaviors* *Pearn, Mulrooney & Payne, 1998

  13. Finding fault vs Proving support Focusing on effects vs Focusing on causes Assuming the person vs Assuming the person should feel guilty wants to learn Seeing mistakes as vs Seeing mistakes assomething that must part of a learning be avoided process Blame and Gain Behaviors* *Pearn, Mulrooney & Payne, 1998

  14. “Gain (Safety) Cultures” • People learn from their mistakes • People avoid making the same kind of mistakes by sharing the lessons learned • When mistakes occur people take responsibility for them Sitkin, 1992

  15. How to Create a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment Staff Buy-In/Support Management/Leadership Support Knowledge Transfer Mechanisms Safe Patient Care Environment

  16. Provide/Maintain a Safe Patient Care Environment Nursing is a High Risk Occupation… You CANNOT have a Culture of Safety without Control Measures in place to reduce risk for Nursing Staff

  17. Over the past 30 years, efforts to reduce injuries have been largely unsuccessful Interventions have focused on body mechanics education training in lifting techniques Culture of Safety concept was unknown/ignored Unsuccessful Solutions

  18. Successful Solutions VISN-Wide Deployment of a Back Injury Prevention Program for Nurses: Safe Patient Handling and Movement

  19. Safe Patient Handling & Movement Program • Uses Patient Care Ergonomics to select appropriate Patient Handling Equipment • Includes continualEnvironmental HazardEvaluation • Includes Program & Equipment Support Structures • SPHM Team • Peer Leaders • SPHM Policy • Knowledge Transfer Mechanisms

  20. Safe Patient Handling & Movement Program • Knowledge Transfer Mechanisms • Mechanisms to obtain AND supply information • After Action Review • Unit Peer Leaders (Back Injury Resource Nurses) • Assessment, Algorithms, & Care Plan for Safe Patient Handling & Movement

  21. How to Create a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment Staff Buy-In/Support Management/Leadership Support Knowledge Transfer Mechanisms Safe Patient Care Environment

  22. Culture of Safety Knowledge Transfer… fosters a Culture of Safety

  23. Knowledge Transfer • Knowledge transfer is the sharing of common knowledge. • Commonknowledge is what we learn in doing our work (Dixon 2000). • Common knowledge can be either tacit (i.e. residing in people’s heads) or explicit (i.e. can be written down into a series of steps or guidelines).

  24. Mechanisms of Knowledge Transfer • Learning After • Accident Review Boards (ARB) • Root Cause Analysis (RCA) • Safety Investigations (OSHA) • Educational Outreach • Best Practices Systems • Epidemiology • After Action Review (AAR) Human Action • Learning Before • Peer Leaders (BIRNS) • Failure Mode & Effect Analysis (FMEA) • Best Practices • AAR • Learning During • Individual Imprinting • Personal Experience

  25. Knowledge Transfer… • Fosters a Culture of Safety • Solves problems quickly • Facilitates implementation of best practices effectively and efficiently • Empowers staff by using the knowledge they possess

  26. How to Create a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment Staff Buy-In/Support Management/Leadership Support Knowledge Transfer Mechanisms Safe Patient Care Environment

  27. How to Create a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment How can your organization achieve... • Staff Buy-In/Support? • Management/Leadership Support?

  28. How to Create a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment Utilize Change Strategies • Use Social Marketing • Involve Front-line Workers • Ensure Staff are Competent in Use of Program Elements & Equipment • Use Unit Peer Leaders • Develop Action Plans

  29. How to Create a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment KNOW… You can never implement change so well that some employees will not be distressed. BUT… You can implement change so poorly that virtually all employees will be distressed!!

  30. Social Marketing in Health Care Distressed, yes, but remember… There is no such thing as RESISTANCE – only REACTIONS to change!

  31. Social Marketing in Health Care • What is the response when a behavior is viewed as being ‘resistant’ to change? • Listen less • Emotions escalate • Blame the person

  32. Social Marketing in Health Care • What is the response when the behavior is viewed as ‘reactions’ to change? • Listen more • Emotions diminish • Problem solve

  33. How to Create a Culture of Safety in a Health Care Environment What are the responsibilities/roles of Management and Staff in facilitating a Culture of Safety?

  34. Responsibilities of Front Line Staff • Accept leaders’ invitations “to play” • Learn about and practice ‘systems thinking’ • Team with management • Team with co-workers • Commit to improving communication across organizational levels, units, and among peer group

  35. Role of Leaders & Managers • Demonstration of a constant commitment to safety as a top-level priority. • Facilitating the permeation of this attitude through the entire organization.

  36. Know….. A “Culture of Safety” is Attainable…

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