How to monitor patient safety in primary care? Healthcare professionals' views
OBJECTIVE: To identify patient safety monitoring strategies in primary care. DESIGN: Open-ended questionnaire survey. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 113 healthcare professionals returned the survey from a group of 500 who were invited to participate achieving a response rate of 22.6%. SETTING: North-We...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-841132022-02-16T16:26:04Z How to monitor patient safety in primary care? Healthcare professionals' views Samra, R. Car, J. Majeed, A. Vincent, C. Aylin, P. Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Patient safety Attitudes Primary care physicians OBJECTIVE: To identify patient safety monitoring strategies in primary care. DESIGN: Open-ended questionnaire survey. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 113 healthcare professionals returned the survey from a group of 500 who were invited to participate achieving a response rate of 22.6%. SETTING: North-West London, United Kingdom. METHOD: A paper-based and equivalent online survey was developed and subjected to multiple stages of piloting. Respondents were asked to suggest strategies for monitoring patient safety in primary care. These monitoring suggestions were then subjected to a content frequency analysis which was conducted by two researchers. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Respondent-derived monitoring strategies. RESULTS: In total, respondents offered 188 suggestions for monitoring patient safety in primary care. The content analysis revealed that these could be condensed into 24 different future monitoring strategies with varying levels of support. Most commonly, respondents supported the suggestion that patient safety can only be monitored effectively in primary care with greater levels of staffing or with additional resources. CONCLUSION: Approximately one-third of all responses were recommendations for strategies which addressed monitoring of the individual in the clinical practice environment (e.g. GP, practice nurse) to improve safety. There was a clear need for more staff and resource set aside to allow and encourage safety monitoring. Respondents recommended the dissemination of specific information for monitoring patient safety such as distributing the lessons of significant event audits amongst GP practices to enable shared learning. Published version 2016-10-31T07:54:51Z 2019-12-06T15:38:38Z 2016-10-31T07:54:51Z 2019-12-06T15:38:38Z 2016 Journal Article Samra, R., Car, J., Majeed, A., Vincent, C.,& Aylin, P. (2016). How to monitor patient safety in primary care? Healthcare professionals' views. JRSM Open, 7(8). https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84113 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41597 10.1177/2054270416648045 27540488 en JRSM Open This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page(https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage). 8 p. application/pdf |
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Patient safety Attitudes Primary care physicians Samra, R. Car, J. Majeed, A. Vincent, C. Aylin, P. How to monitor patient safety in primary care? Healthcare professionals' views |
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OBJECTIVE: To identify patient safety monitoring strategies in primary care.
DESIGN: Open-ended questionnaire survey.
PARTICIPANTS: A total of 113 healthcare professionals returned the survey from a group of 500 who were invited to participate achieving a response rate of 22.6%.
SETTING: North-West London, United Kingdom.
METHOD: A paper-based and equivalent online survey was developed and subjected to multiple stages of piloting. Respondents were asked to suggest strategies for monitoring patient safety in primary care. These monitoring suggestions were then subjected to a content frequency analysis which was conducted by two researchers.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Respondent-derived monitoring strategies.
RESULTS: In total, respondents offered 188 suggestions for monitoring patient safety in primary care. The content analysis revealed that these could be condensed into 24 different future monitoring strategies with varying levels of support. Most commonly, respondents supported the suggestion that patient safety can only be monitored effectively in primary care with greater levels of staffing or with additional resources.
CONCLUSION: Approximately one-third of all responses were recommendations for strategies which addressed monitoring of the individual in the clinical practice environment (e.g. GP, practice nurse) to improve safety. There was a clear need for more staff and resource set aside to allow and encourage safety monitoring. Respondents recommended the dissemination of specific information for monitoring patient safety such as distributing the lessons of significant event audits amongst GP practices to enable shared learning. |
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Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) |
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Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Samra, R. Car, J. Majeed, A. Vincent, C. Aylin, P. |
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Article |
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Samra, R. Car, J. Majeed, A. Vincent, C. Aylin, P. |
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Samra, R. |
title |
How to monitor patient safety in primary care? Healthcare professionals' views |
title_short |
How to monitor patient safety in primary care? Healthcare professionals' views |
title_full |
How to monitor patient safety in primary care? Healthcare professionals' views |
title_fullStr |
How to monitor patient safety in primary care? Healthcare professionals' views |
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How to monitor patient safety in primary care? Healthcare professionals' views |
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how to monitor patient safety in primary care? healthcare professionals' views |
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2016 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84113 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41597 |
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1725985646695153664 |