1. Building a culture of safety through team training and engagement
- Author
-
Lily Thomas and Catherine Galla
- Subjects
Capacity Building ,Inservice Training ,Interprofessional Relations ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,New York ,Organizational culture ,Collaborative Care ,Patient safety ,United States Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality ,Nursing ,Task Performance and Analysis ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,media_common ,Patient Care Team ,Teamwork ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Long-Term Care ,Organizational Culture ,Organizational Innovation ,United States ,Community hospital ,Long-term care ,Transformational leadership ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Models, Organizational ,Interdisciplinary Communication ,Patient Safety ,business - Abstract
Medical errors continue to occur despite multiple strategies devised for their prevention. Although many safety initiatives lead to improvement, they are often short lived and unsustainable. Our goal was to build a culture of patient safety within a structure that optimised teamwork and ongoing engagement of the healthcare team. Teamwork impacts the effectiveness of care, patient safety and clinical outcomes, and team training has been identified as a strategy for enhancing teamwork, reducing medical errors and building a culture of safety in healthcare. Therefore, we implemented Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety (TeamSTEPPS), an evidence-based framework which was used for team training to create transformational and/or incremental changes; facilitating transformation of organisational culture, or solving specific problems. To date, TeamSTEPPS (TS) has been implemented in 14 hospitals, two Long Term Care Facilities, and outpatient areas across the North Shore LIJ Health System. 32 150 members of the healthcare team have been trained. TeamSTEPPS was piloted at a community hospital within the framework of the health system's organisational care delivery model, the Collaborative Care Model to facilitate sustainment. AHRQ's Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture, (HSOPSC), was administered before and after implementation of TeamSTEPPS, comparing the perception of patient safety by the heathcare team. Pilot hospital results of HSOPSC show significant improvement from 2007 (pre-TeamSTEPPS) to 2010. System-wide results of HSOPSC show similar trends to those seen in the pilot hospital. Valuable lessons for organisational success from the pilot hospital enabled rapid spread of TeamSTEPPS across the rest of the health system.
- Published
- 2012