Standardization in patient safety: The WHO high 5s project
Morganstein, Louise, Leotsakos, Agnès, Zheng, Hao, Croteau, Rick, Loeb, Jerod M., Sherman, Heather, Hoffman, Carolyn, O'Leary, Dennis, Bruneau, Charles, Lee, Peter, Duguid, Margaret, Thomeczek, Christian, van der Schrieck-de Loos, Erica and Munier, Bill (2014) Standardization in patient safety: The WHO high 5s project. International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 26 (2). pp. 109-116. ISSN 353-4505 (Print); 1464-3677 (Electronic)
Full text not yet available from this repository.Abstract
Quality problem: Despite its success in other industries, process standardization in health care has been slow to gain traction or to demonstrate a positive impact on the safety of care. Intervention: The High 5s project is a global patient safety initiative of the World Health Organization (WHO) to facilitate the development, implementation and evaluation of Standard Operating Protocols (SOPs) within a global learning community to achieve measurable, significant and sustainable reductions in challenging patient safety problems. Goals: The project seeks to answer two questions: (i) Is it feasible to implement standardized health care processes in individual hospitals, among multiple hospitals within individual countries and across country boundaries? (ii) If so, what is the impact of standardization on the safety problems that the project is targeting? Method: The two key areas in which the High 5s project is innovative are its use of process standardization both in hospitals within a country and in multiple participating countries, and its carefully designed multi-pronged approach to evaluation. Status: Three SOPs—correct surgery, medication reconciliation, concentrated injectable medicines—have been developed and are being implemented and evaluated in multiple hospitals in seven participating countries. Nearly 5 years into the implementation, it is clear that this is just the beginning of what can be seen as an exercise in behavior management, asking whether health care workers can adapt their behaviors and environments to standardize care processes in widely varying hospital settings.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | Patient Safety, World Health Organization, Hospitals, Quality of Care |
Subjects: | Health and Medical Sciences > Patient Care |
Department/People: | Children, Young Adult and Family Services |
URI: | https://repository.tavistockandportman.ac.uk/id/eprint/895 |
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