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About The Book
Description
Author
<p>Over the past decade or so we have seen a multitude of improvement programmes and projects to improve the safety of patient care in healthcare. However the full potential of these efforts and especially those that seek to address an entire system has not yet been reached. The current pandemic has made this more evident than ever.</p><p>We have tended to focus on problems in isolation one harm at a time and our efforts have been simplistic and myopic. If we are to save more lives and significantly reduce patient harm we need to adopt a holistic systematic approach that extends across cultural technological and procedural boundaries. <i>Patient Safety Now </i>is about the fact that it is time to care for everyone impacted by patient safety how we need to take the time to care for everyone in a meaningful way and how hospitals need to enable staff time to care safely.</p><p>This book builds on the author’s two previous books on patient safety. <i>Rethinking Patient Safety </i>talked about ways in which we need to rethink patient safety in healthcare and describes what we’ve learned over the last two decades. <i>Implementing Patient Safety </i>talked about what we can do differently and how we can use those lessons learned to improve the way we implement patient safety initiatives and encourage a culture of safety across a healthcare system. <i>Patient Safety Now </i>unites the concepts theories and ideas of the previous two books with updated material and examples including what has been learned by patient safety specialists during a pandemic.</p><p><i>Patient Safety Now </i>provides the reader with a unique view of patient safety that looks beyond the traditional negative and retrospective approach to one that is proactive and recognizes the impact of conditions behaviours and cultures that exist in healthcare on everyone. It is written not only for healthcare professionals and patient safety personnel but for patients and their families who all want the same thing. Too often when things go wrong relationships quickly become adversarial when in fact this can be avoided by recognizing that rather than being in separate camps there are shared needs and goals in relations to patient safety.</p>