Why is it so hard to speak out about patient safety?

In the previous episodes of Doctor Informed, we've heard why it's so important to talk about patient safety concerns, and some of the mechanisms that allow hospital staff to raise them, but knowing why and how doesn't always make it easier to speak out. In this episode we're exploring the concept of a voiceable concern – identifying what counts as a concern, and what counts as an occasion for voice by an individual, is not a straightforward matter of applying objective criteria- for example how do you tell if you're witnessing poor practice, or just something that lies outside your area of understanding? Or how do you know if the common practice in this particular ward is actually an outlier when looking at other hospitals? Our guests this week; Mary Dixon-Woods is director of THIS Institute, and a Health Foundation Professor of Healthca re Improvement Studies in the Department of Public Health and Primary Care at the University of Cambridge. Her work is concerned with generating a high quality evidence-base to support the organisation, quality and safety of care delivered to patients. Zoe Fritz is a consultant in acute medicine at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, she is also a Wellcome Fellow in society and ethics at THIS Institute, investigating how we communicate and record uncertainty around diagnosis. Reading: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34978470/ www.bmj.com/podcasts/doctorinformed/https://www.thisinstitute.cam.ac.uk/podcast/
Source: The BMJ Podcast - Category: General Medicine Authors: Source Type: podcasts