The author asks for the attention of leaders and all other stakeholders to calls of the World Health Organization (WHO), the Institute of Medicine (IOM), and the UK National Health Service (NHS) to promote continuous learning to reduce harm to patients. This paper presents a concept for structured bottom-up methodology that enables and empowers all stakeholders to identify, prioritize, and address safety challenges. This methodology takes advantage of the memory of the experiences of all persons involved in providing care. It respects and responds to the uniqueness of each setting by empowering and motivating all team members to commit to harm reduction. It is based on previously published work on "Best Practices Research (BPR) and on "Systematic Appraisal of Risk and Its Management for Error Reduction (SARAIMER). The latter approach, has been shown by the author (with Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) support), to reduce adverse events and their severity through empowerment, ownership and work satisfaction. The author puts forward a strategy for leaders to implement, in response to national and international calls for Better health, Better care, and Better value (the 3B's of healthcare) in the US Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. This is designed to enable and implement " A promise to learn- a commitment to act. AHRQ has recently published "A Toolkit for Rapid-Cycle Patient Safety and Quality Improvement that includes an adapted version of SARAIMER.
CITATION STYLE
Singh, R. (2013). Creating Minimum Harm Practice (MiHaP): A concept for continuous improvement. F1000Research, 2. https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.2-276.v1
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