Healthcare Business Review

Advertise

with us

  • APAC
    • US
    • EUROPE
    • APAC
    • CANADA
    • LATAM
  • Home
  • Sections
    Business Process Outsourcing
    Compliance & Risk Management
    Consulting Service
    Facility Management Services
    Financial Services
    Healthcare Consulting
    Healthcare Digital Marketing
    Healthcare Education
    Healthcare Marketing
    Healthcare Procurement
    Healthcare Staffing
    Medical Staff Training and Development
    Medical Transportation
    Nurse Staffing
    Plastic Surgery
    Regenerative Medicine
    Therapy Services 
    Business Process Outsourcing
    Compliance & Risk Management
    Consulting Service
    Facility Management Services
    Financial Services
    Healthcare Consulting
    Healthcare Digital Marketing
    Healthcare Education
    Healthcare Marketing
    Healthcare Procurement
    Healthcare Staffing
    Medical Staff Training and Development
    Medical Transportation
    Nurse Staffing
    Plastic Surgery
    Regenerative Medicine
    Therapy Services 
  • CXO Insights
  • News
  • Vendor Viewpoint
  • Conferences
  • CXO Awards
×
#

Healthcare Business Review Weekly Brief

Be first to read the latest tech news, Industry Leader's Insights, and CIO interviews of medium and large enterprises exclusively from Healthcare Business Review

Subscribe

loading

Thank you for Subscribing to Healthcare Business Review Weekly Brief

  • Home
  • CXO Insights

Mastering Patient Safety: Navigating Healthcare System Dynamics

Healthcare Business Review

Eva Ferlez, Head of Patient Safety and Effective Practice and Patient Safety Specialist, West London NHS Trust
Tweet

Eva Ferlez's 15-year journey within the NHS weaves a rich tapestry of commitment to change. Navigating the NHS's intricate framework, she seamlessly transitioned between trusts, specializing in acute and integrated care, mental health services, and commissioning. Starting in a legal role, Eva supported clinical care processes, from coronial inquiries to clinical negligence cases. Her journey evolved into patient safety investigations, governance, and quality assurance. Her influence extends to developing robust incident systems that fortify patient safety. In her commissioning role, Eva orchestrated healthcare with a holistic view, meticulously monitoring performance and ensuring quality outcomes. As a patient safety specialist, in her current role Eva guides teams through complex investigations, and fostering safety and learning cultures across the organisation.


In an interview with Healthcare Tech Outlook Europe magazine, Ferlez shares her insights on the challenges and emerging trends in the patient monitoring industry and the experience she has gathered in the domain.


What challenges have you seen in achieving quality improvement and maintaining patient safety within healthcare systems? How do you approach overcoming these types of challenges?


My expertise lies in clinical governance, overseeing clinical safety rather than direct care. This offers a unique perspective on patient safety.


The NHS's current trajectory, outlined in the new patient safety framework, strongly emphasizes human factors and systemic learning to enhance patient safety. This approach, while present before, is now reinforced. This direction resonates with me and my colleagues dedicated to patient safety. Core learning consistently emphasizes human factors and system dynamics as pivotal to improvement.


We apply human factors methodologies to investigate incidents and extract key insights and learning, employing tools that guide investigators in scrutinizing the interplay between individuals and their working conditions and environment


This learning doesn't rely on intricate knowledge of specific clinical areas, although these can be relevant in some cases, but centers on understanding how care providers operate in their working environments. Key themes encompass communication, patient engagement, collaboration, and teamwork. Challenges include working conditions, staffing, and complexities of effectively using the various electronic systems in use to manage patient records, particularly in high-pressure situations or when navigating complex interfaces with other NHS Trusts and agencies.


Persistent issues have long been recognized, yet full comprehension and resolution remain challenging. The NHS grapples with intricate systems underlying healthcare operations. While these challenges are identified, effectively addressing them within the complex healthcare ecosystem is an ongoing endeavor.


What are some of the emerging technologies that are influencing the landscape of patient safety and quality? As a leader in this space, how do you believe any certain technological trends would shape the future of patient safety and effective practice?


In the technological realm, it's acknowledged that healthcare faces challenges integrating disparate IT systems. Assembled piece by piece, these systems often operate in silos, lacking cohesion. Bridging these gaps is complex, requiring more than a "band-aid" approach.


The evolution of these systems yields a mosaic of technologies from various sources, complicating seamless integration. This presents a significant challenge, particularly in patient safety. For clinicians, handling diverse systems is onerous and counterproductive. A better approach arises from technology development itself, embracing user-centered design. Instead of expecting users to to train and adapt to the IT systems in use, create intuitive, user-friendly technologies.


Patient safety learning offers valuable insights that underscore a crucial point—increasing training to navigate technology often doesn't yield the desired outcomes. By incorporating these insights, we reshape the role of technology in healthcare, bridging the gap between philosophy and technology. This transformation ensures that systems align seamlessly with user needs and capabilities.


Could you provide your insights into how you integrate human factor principles into your leadership approach?


Human factors have emerged as a pivotal paradigm in patient safety, enhancing methodologies like root cause analysis. Our approach involves applying human factor methodologies to investigate incidents and extract key insights and learning. This entails employing tools that guide investigators in scrutinizing the interplay between individuals and their working conditions and environment, illuminating human factor elements, and conducting effective actions.


Service delivery aligns with information pathways. Whether face-to-face or remote communication, our focus remains on understanding these dynamics. In process improvement, these factors wield considerable influence. Human factors acknowledge the difference between ‘work-as-imagined’ and ‘work-as-done’– policies and processes versus day-to-day reality.


We learn by recognizing this divergence. Policies may not align with real-world scenarios, but understanding drives us to acknowledge unaccounted elements. Analyzing the environment and conditions within which care is delivered empowers frontline caregivers to align actions with established procedures, and to improve the processes and procedures to make it easier for clinicians to ‘do the right thing’.


Drawing from your journey and experience, what primary advice would you offer to those aiming to create a substantial influence within this domain?


For those aspiring to a patient safety career, my advice centers on fostering courage and curiosity. This journey demands continuous education, training, and skill refinement. Staying attuned to emerging developments bolsters confidence to translate insights into actionable improvements in our work environments.


Courage involves raising concerns effectively. Human factors extend beyond patient safety, they permeate our organizations. Cognitive biases from can cloud perception at all levels from minor incidents to major organizational challenges.


By championing self-awareness and decisiveness, we empower ourselves to highlight concerns and elevate them to leadership candidly. This is not to imply lack of willingness by leaders to hear the concerns, but simply acknowledges an overwhelming array of responsibilities within healthcare leadership. The role of patient safety professionals is to offer clarity amidst the information overload, which is pivotal in propelling solutions forward.


Weekly Brief

loading
> <
  • Current Issue
  • Current Issue

Read Also

The Importance of Patient-first Approach To Innovation

The Importance of Patient-first Approach To Innovation

Dr. Aivee Teo, Founder, President and Medical Director, The Aivee Clinic
READ MORE
Combining Expertise Across Borders to Implement Equitable and Sustainable Precision Cancer

Combining Expertise Across Borders to Implement Equitable and Sustainable Precision Cancer

Kjetil Tasken, Head and Director of Institute of Cancer Research, Oslo University Hospital
READ MORE
Takeaways from Incorporating the Patient Experience as a Strategic Element and Enabler to Foster a Culture of Innovation through the Hospital

Takeaways from Incorporating the Patient Experience as a Strategic Element and Enabler to Foster a Culture of Innovation through the Hospital

Joan Vinyets i Rejón, Head of Patient Experience, Barcelona Children’s Hospital Sant Joan de Déu
READ MORE
Revolutionising patient education: How a Start-Up called HelloProfessor is changing the game

Revolutionising patient education: How a Start-Up called HelloProfessor is changing the game

Sophia Neisinger, Dermatology Resident & Head Digital Health Program, Charite
READ MORE
The Hidden Costs of Vendor Contracts: How Boilerplate Terms Can Undermine Hospital Budgets

The Hidden Costs of Vendor Contracts: How Boilerplate Terms Can Undermine Hospital Budgets

Cesar A. Roman, Director of Strategic Sourcing and Procurement Operations, University Health
READ MORE
The Rise of the Healthcare Innovator

The Rise of the Healthcare Innovator

Ryan Kerstein, Associate Medical Director for Innovation and Research, Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust
READ MORE

The Hidden Costs of Vendor Contracts: How Boilerplate Terms Can Undermine Hospital Budgets

Cesar A. Roman, Director of Strategic Sourcing and Procurement Operations, University Health

The Rise of the Healthcare Innovator

Ryan Kerstein, Associate Medical Director for Innovation and Research, Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust

Efficiently Implementing Preventative Maintenance Programs with Skilled Engineers

Mark Hornby, Medical Engineering Manager, Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust

Revolutionizing Podiatry for Efficient Patient Care

Ron Guberman, Director of Podiatric Medical Education and Co-Chief of the Podiatry Division, Wyckoff Heights Medical Center
Loading...
Copyright © 2025 Healthcare Business Review. All rights reserved. |  Subscribe |  Sitemap |  About us |  Newsletter |  Feedback Policy |  Editorial Policy follow on linkedin
CLOSE

Specials

I agree We use cookies on this website to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies. More info

This content is copyright protected

However, if you would like to share the information in this article, you may use the link below:

https://speech-therapy-europe.healthcarebusinessreviewapac.com/cxoinsight/mastering-patient-safety-navigating-healthcare-system-dynamics--nwid-1863.html