Qualitative findings from a pilot stage implementation of a novel organizational learning tool toward operationalizing the Safety-II paradigm in health care.

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Citation: Applied Ergonomics. 82:102913, 2020 Jan.PMID: 31450045Institution: MedStar Institute for Innovation | MedStar Washington Hospital CenterDepartment: Emergency Medicine | MedStar Institute for Quality and SafetyForm of publication: Journal ArticleMedline article type(s): Journal ArticleSubject headings: *Learning Health System/og [Organization & Administration] | *Organizational Culture | *Patient Safety | *Risk Management/og [Organization & Administration] | *Safety Management/og [Organization & Administration] | Adult | Anesthesiology/og [Organization & Administration] | Female | Health Plan Implementation | Humans | Male | Patient Care | Pilot Projects | Qualitative ResearchYear: 2020ISSN:
  • 0003-6870
Name of journal: Applied ergonomicsAbstract: 'Safety-II' is a new approach to safety, which emphasizes learning proactively about how safety and efficacy are achieved in everyday frontline work. Previous research developed a new lesson-sharing tool designed based on the Safety-II approach: Resilience Engineering Tool to Improve Patient Safety (RETIPS). The tool comprises questions designed to elicit narratives of adaptations that have contributed to effectiveness in care delivery. The purpose of this study is to revise and validate the design of RETIPS. The tool was revised based on feedback of clinicians at a large multi-specialty hospital, resulting in a version customized for anesthesia residents, RETIPS-AnRes. RETIPS-AnRes was administered on a pilot-basis to anesthesia resident groups for a limited period of time. A review of the reports obtained shows a strong alignment of responses with the conceptual basis of the tool, i.e. learning about how things go well in everyday work. The exemplars include both, specific instances of successful patient care, as well as generic routines that contribute to safe and/or effective care delivery. These findings support RETIPS as a tool to operationalize the Safety-II paradigm in healthcare. Lessons and implications for implementation on a wider scale are discussed. Copyright (c) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.All authors: Bisantz AM, Fairbanks RJ, Hegde S, Hettinger AZ, Jackson CD, Krevat SA, Wreathall JOriginally published: Applied Ergonomics. 82:102913, 2019 Aug 23.Fiscal year: FY2020Digital Object Identifier: Date added to catalog: 2019-10-10
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Journal Article MedStar Authors Catalog Article 31450045 Available 31450045

'Safety-II' is a new approach to safety, which emphasizes learning proactively about how safety and efficacy are achieved in everyday frontline work. Previous research developed a new lesson-sharing tool designed based on the Safety-II approach: Resilience Engineering Tool to Improve Patient Safety (RETIPS). The tool comprises questions designed to elicit narratives of adaptations that have contributed to effectiveness in care delivery. The purpose of this study is to revise and validate the design of RETIPS. The tool was revised based on feedback of clinicians at a large multi-specialty hospital, resulting in a version customized for anesthesia residents, RETIPS-AnRes. RETIPS-AnRes was administered on a pilot-basis to anesthesia resident groups for a limited period of time. A review of the reports obtained shows a strong alignment of responses with the conceptual basis of the tool, i.e. learning about how things go well in everyday work. The exemplars include both, specific instances of successful patient care, as well as generic routines that contribute to safe and/or effective care delivery. These findings support RETIPS as a tool to operationalize the Safety-II paradigm in healthcare. Lessons and implications for implementation on a wider scale are discussed. Copyright (c) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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