Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The focus of our work is openness, learning and person-centred involvement following patient safety incidents in health care. We will explore patients, carers and relatives' perspectives on what is important to them, what facilitates and impedes their involvement in patient safety reviews and what matters to them. We are interested in exploring how patient, carer and relative involvement can assist reconciliation, organisational and national learning. Information gained will be used to support the development of national guidance around involving people in a compassionate and caring way and how their experience could help organisational and national learning when things go wrong in health care.


Clinical Trial Description

INTRODUCTION: Scotland is committed to a person-centred approach to social care and health services. This includes a duty of candour towards service users and families when things go wrong. Typical of service users and families who are involved in patient safety incidents or make complaints about services is the stated intent that they "don't want anyone else to go through what they have experienced". Inherent in this sentiment is the desire that services learn from feedback, safety incidents, complaints and near misses where unnecessary harm is caused (or could have been) when interacting with health care services. Current guidance suggests health and care providers offer an explanation of the incident, an apology, and a commitment to prevent recurrence. There is growing recognition among health care providers and policy makers that when things go wrong, the patient or their families should be heard and participate in the incident investigation process (Kok et al 2018). Guidance on how best to involve patients, carers and relatives in a caring and compassionate manner is lacking and current practice variable. The joint commission for openness and learning is committed to understanding and learning what 'good' patient involvement in patient safety reviews could look like as part of improving patient safety in health care. AIMS: This study is part of a larger programme of work being undertaken by NHS Education for Scotland (NES) and Health Improvement Scotland (HIS) on behalf of the Scottish Government. The focus of our work is openness, learning and person-centred involvement following patient safety incidents in health care. We will explore patients, carers and relatives' perspectives on what is important to them, what facilitates and impedes their involvement in patient safety reviews and what matters to them. We are interested in exploring how patient, carer and relative involvement can assist reconciliation, organisational and national learning. Information gained will be used to support the development of national guidance around involving people in a compassionate and caring way and how their experience could help organisational and national learning when things go wrong in health care. OBJECTIVES: - To identify factors that facilitate and impede patient, carer and relative involvement using patient perspectives to guide and strengthen how the NHS involves, communicates and learns with patients their carers and relatives - To explore how to involve people in a compassionate and caring way and how their experience can be harnessed to assist national and organisational learning ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04897087
Study type Observational
Source NHS Education for Scotland
Contact
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date May 20, 2021
Completion date January 20, 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Not yet recruiting NCT05958108 - Effectivenness and Implementation of an Intervention to Improve Primary Care Patient Safety Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT06043895 - EpiFaith CV for Central Venous Catheterization N/A
Recruiting NCT02574104 - Generalizing TESTPILOT to New Single Family Room NICUs N/A
Completed NCT00599209 - Health Information Technology in the Nursing Home N/A
Completed NCT04576299 - Health Care Workers' Perception of Patient Safety During COVID-19 Pandemic
Completed NCT03663491 - Necessity of Transnasal Gastroscopy in Routine Diagnostics - a Patient Centered Requirement Analysis N/A
Completed NCT00212927 - Continuity of Care and Outcomes After Discharge From Hospital N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05062434 - An Intervention to Impact Cardiovascular Implantable Electronic Device Lead Models Implanted in Veterans N/A
Recruiting NCT06089239 - De-Implementing Fall Prevention Alarms in Hospitals N/A
Recruiting NCT04861025 - Siderails as a Measure of Physical Restraint. GERBAR Trial
Completed NCT04990986 - Co-Development and Evaluation of a Complex Intervention to Increase Medication Safety in Nursing Homes N/A
Recruiting NCT02955836 - Effectiveness of Monitoring Information System of Nursing Related Patient Safety and Quality Indicators N/A
Completed NCT01246544 - Helsinki Declaration on Patient Safety N/A
Recruiting NCT05530187 - ePRO-based Model of Care to Manage and Monitoring Symptoms of Cancer Patients Treated With Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors N/A
Recruiting NCT04176094 - Intensive Care Unit Resident Scheduling Trial N/A
Completed NCT05794490 - Learning From Excellence in a Hospital Unit
Recruiting NCT06269250 - Acceptance and Perceived Benefits of Digitalization by Medical Assistants
Recruiting NCT03105713 - Development and Implementation of Patient Safety Checklists Before, During and After In-hospital Surgery N/A
Completed NCT04184570 - Audit of International Intraoperative Hemotherapy and Blood Loss Documentation
Active, not recruiting NCT06259812 - Machine Learning Prediction of Parameters of Early Warning Scores in Intensive Care Units