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The Role of Patients in Patient Safety Ian Leistikow, MD PhD Senior Inspector at Dutch Healthcare Inspectorate Member Strategic Advisory Board of International Forum on Quality and Safety in Healthcare No conflicts of interest

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The Role of Patients in

Patient Safety

Ian Leistikow, MD PhD

Senior Inspector at Dutch Healthcare

Inspectorate

Member Strategic Advisory Board of International

Forum on Quality and Safety in Healthcare

No conflicts of interest

Involving patients in designing and executing

patient safety policy

• Ensure professionals have positive attitudes, are supportive and ask for feedback;

• Build infrastructure to do something about patients’ comments;

• Make patients feel able and encouraged to take part.

Health Foundation. Involving patients in patient safety. 2013

Involving patients in designing and executing

patient safety policy

“greater patient involvement may require

changing the culture of healthcare so that

patients and professionals are working as

partners in a joint team.”

Is there a parallel between

development of the role of patients

in Patient Safety

and

in Healthcare?

The Netherlands, 1969

1969: A plea for patient engagement

• Doctors should be open and honest towards patient about his illness and the treatment possibilities

• Patients should be involved in the decision making process.

• “I can see it happening that the patient can freely browse through his own patient record.”

Only 45 years ago

• We did not tell the patient what he/she had

• The ward nurse often wasn’t even told

Developments over the past 45 years

• Openness about illness

• Openness about treatment possibilities

• Openness about possible side effects of

treatment

• Training physicians in telling “bad news”

• Openness about inadequate result of treatment

• “Informed consent”

• “Shared decision making”

• “What’s the matter” “What matters to you?”

Health Foundations recommendations:

• Ensure professionals have positive attitudes, are supportive and ask for feedback;

• Build infrastructure to do something about patients’ comments;

• Make patients feel able and encouraged to take part.

Health Foundation. Involving patients in patient safety. 2013

Is there a parallel between

development of the role of patients

in Patient Safety

and

in Healthcare?

1992 – 2000: My medical education

• Fallibility was not discussed explicitly

• Implicitly, fallibility was seen as character flaw

• Mostly, we did not even see unsafety in care,

let alone:

– Learn how to discuss it with each other

– Learn how to discuss it with the patient

– Learn how to prevent it

until 2003

the Dutch word for

patient safety

did not exist

Developments over the past 15 years

• Acknowledgement of patient safety as issue

• Openness about adverse events

• Training healthcare professionals in analysis

• Training physicians in being “bad news”

• Openness about the outcome of analysis

• Engaging patients in reconstruction of AE

• Sharing AE reports with the patient

Involving patients in healthcare/patient safety

• First we simply did not know

• Then we knew, but did not understand

• Then we understood, but did not see a role for patients

• Then we told patients

• Then we engaged patients

• Then we empowered patients (healthcare)

• Now we see the patient as the “owner” (healthcare)

Experiences in the Netherlands

• Reluctance to involve patients in reconstruction

• Hospitals fear giving patients the AE analysis report

• Patient and Hospital have different perception as to what constitutes the AE

• Distrust of patients in fair process

• Difficult for patients to understand difference between AE analysis and complaint/financial claim

2013-2015: informing patients

n = 1700 reports

2013-2015: engaging patients

n = 1700 reports

Future role of patients in patient safety?

• Empowered patients

• See the patient as the “owner” of his/her AE

Conclusion

• The role of patients in patient safety is developing similarly as the role of patients in healthcare.

• Many challenges must be overcome, but we’ve overcome them all before.

• We cannot predict the future, but we can make an educated guess, based on the past

• When in doubt, think “what would I want if it was about me?”

Thank you for your attention

[email protected]