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cover of episode 123: Safer Together | The Architecture of a Movement

123: Safer Together | The Architecture of a Movement

2025/6/27
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Don Berwick
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Patricia McGaffigan
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Don Berwick: 作为一名儿科医生,我亲身经历过医疗错误带来的伤害。在我的实习期间,我曾因操作失误险些导致婴儿死亡。这件事让我深刻认识到,医疗错误是不可避免的,但更重要的是我们如何从中学习并改进系统。我认为,医疗错误很少是个人过错,更多是系统性问题导致的。我们应该关注如何设计更安全的系统,而不是一味地指责个人。我们需要建立一种开放、学习的文化,鼓励人们报告错误,而不是害怕受到惩罚。只有这样,我们才能真正提高医疗安全水平。 Patricia McGaffigan: 我完全同意Don的观点。医疗安全不仅仅是避免错误,更重要的是建立一个安全的工作环境,让医护人员感到受到重视和支持。恐惧和指责的文化对安全有害。我们需要改变我们看待伤害的方式,不仅仅关注那些可以量化的指标,更要关注患者和医护人员的体验。我们需要与患者和家属建立伙伴关系,倾听他们的声音,了解他们的需求。只有这样,我们才能真正实现以患者为中心的医疗安全。

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Chapters
This chapter emphasizes the persistent problem of preventable harm in healthcare, despite decades of effort. It highlights the rising violence against healthcare workers and the unsustainable pressure on the workforce. The chapter introduces a pivotal shift toward 'total systems safety' as a solution.
  • Preventable harm in healthcare persists despite decades of effort.
  • Violence against healthcare workers is rising.
  • Record understaffing, burnout, and increasing documentation demands exacerbate the problem.
  • A shift towards 'total systems safety' is proposed as a solution.

Shownotes Transcript

Despite decades of effort and innovation since the groundbreaking To Err is Human) report over 25 years ago, preventable harm in healthcare persists, and violence against healthcare workers continues to rise. With record understaffing, burnout, mandatory overtime, and mounting documentation demands, the pressure to provide safe care has never been higher nor the stakes more urgent. In this first episode of our new series focusing on safety in healthcare, we explore a bold shift toward "total systems safety" with two leaders at the forefront of this movement who know these challenges all too well. Patricia McGaffigan), RN, MS, CPPS, Senior Advisor for Patient and Workforce Safety at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and President of the Certification Board for Professionals in Patient Safety, and Donald Berwick), MD, MPP, FRCP, President Emeritus and Senior Fellow at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and former Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Together, they continue to shape national safety efforts including IHI’s Safer Together: National Action Plan to Advance Patient Safety) the first public-private collaboration of its kind. Spearheaded by McGaffigan and bringing together 27 major organizations that had never collaborated before. The plan aims to restructure the very foundation of healthcare, building safety into every level of the system around four interlocking pillars. Leadership & Governance: Strong, visible leadership and policies that make safety a strategic priority. Workforce Safety & Well-Being: Protecting nurses and healthcare workers – physically and mentally – so they can care safely for others. Patient & Family Engagement: Partnering with patients and family caregivers as co-designers of safe care. Learning Systems: Creating feedback loops and continuous improvement so lessons from one hospital spread everywhere.

At the heart of this movement is a truth long understood by nurses: safety is not a checklist or a policy, it’s a culture, a commitment, and a collective responsibility. As Patricia McGaffigan reminds us, “You can’t have patient safety if you don’t have a safe workforce.” And as Don Berwick warns, “The illusion that safety is a matter of individual effort is one of the most toxic notions in the whole safety enterprise. It is we, not me.” Nurses have always led by example, holding space for healing while navigating broken systems. Now, their leadership is essential in building the future of healthcare safety: one that protects not only patients, but the people who care for them. Where healthcare is not only safer, but also is a culture that ensures we’re all Safer Together.