This week is Patient Safety Awareness Week. Of course, every day health care providers focus on patient safety. This year PSAW, which is led by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, now merged with the National Patient Safety Foundation, is highlighting safety culture and patient engagement.

At Carilion, one aspect of ensuring patient safety and improving health outcomes is through the science of human factors research. This science explores human capabilities and limitations and designs work processes that make it easy to do the right thing, and hard to do the wrong thing. Our human factors team works closely with clinicians and patients to improve patient safety and quality of care for all patients. A human factors approach addresses all aspects of a work system, including the design of equipment, the physical environment and the actual tasks that individual caregivers do on a daily basis. We work to design the system so that caregivers can focus on providing excellent care to patients every day.

We're doing much more to ensure patient safety, and I know your hospitals and health systems are too. Please take the opportunity this week to share your work and resources on patient safety, safety culture and patient engagement with your community. The AHA is sharing resources on its website, and the  and websites suggest ideas and activities for engaging staff and patients in PSAW as well. 

America's hospitals are leaders in advancing patient safety, and we are honored to partner with patients, families and our communities to celebrate Patient Safety Awareness Week.   

Related News Articles

Headline
The Food and Drug Administration published a notice from Amneal Pharmaceutical that said the company is recalling two lots of its Ropivacaine Hydrochloride…
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration has identified a Class I recall of Q’Apel Medical 072 Aspiration System after the company submitted three device event reports…
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration has issued alerts for issues with certain catheters made by BD and Conavi. BD identified an increase in material fatigue…
Headline
The AHA Living Learning Network is launching the Quality Exchange, a virtual collaborative for health care quality and patient safety professionals at…
Headline
As part of the AHA's Patient Safety Initiative, a dedicated webpage features case studies showing how hospitals and health systems across the nation are…
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration has identified a Class I recall of Medtronic Aortic Root Cannulas due to a risk of unexpected loose material in the male luer…