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System Barriers To Achieve Safe Health Care

System Barriers To Achieve Safe Health Care. Presented by Mr. Amrth Ganapathy A.P MBA (HHC), Symbiosis Institute of Health Science, Pune. SAFE HEALTH CARE. IMPROVING PATIENT CARE. PATIENT SAFETY AND;. THE RELIABILITY OF HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS. WHY ?.

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System Barriers To Achieve Safe Health Care

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  1. System Barriers To Achieve Safe Health Care Presented by Mr. Amrth Ganapathy A.P MBA (HHC), Symbiosis Institute of Health Science, Pune.

  2. SAFE HEALTH CARE IMPROVING PATIENT CARE PATIENT SAFETY AND; • THE RELIABILITY OF HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS WHY ?

  3. Barriers Preventing a Safe IndustrialSystem:

  4. Acceptance of Limitations on Maximum Performance • Regulations that limit the levelof risk allowed. • level dictated in situations in whichhigh levels of production and performance. • "attain a specified high level of production, no matter whatit takes"—the system is very unsafe.

  5. Abandonment of Professional Autonomy • Restriction of the autonomy of healthcare professionals. • Educating health care professionals reduces the autonomyof health care professionals. • Systemic thinkingand anticipation of the consequences of processes across departmentsremains as major challenges.

  6. Craftsman To An Equivalent Actor • To achieve the next increase in safety levels, health care professionalsmust face a very difficult transition: • abandoning their statusand self-image as craftsmen and instead adopting a positionthat values equivalence among their ranks.

  7. System-Level Arbitration to Optimize Safety Strategies • The increase in pressure from medical malpractice liabilityand media scrutiny has created a need for system-level arbitration. • The safera system is, the more likely it is that society will seek tohold people accountable or seek legal recourse when injuriesoccur.

  8. Need To Simplify Professional Rulesand Regulations • Accumulation of layersintended to improve safety but, make system • overlycomplex, • burdensome, and • overprotected. • When risks to patients become less observable, the best move is to • simplify the system, • eliminate nonproductive regulations, and • give clinicians more latitude in decision making.

  9. Finally, • Health care must overcome 3 unique problems: • A wide range ofrisk among medical specialties, • Difficulty in defining medicalerror, and • Various structural constraints.

  10. Conclusion • The industry, yet to traverse fully the barriers tosafety. • Quality improvement programs, cannot overcome these barriers. • Mastering the barriers will be a challenge and will requireaccepting limitations. • Reduction of errorsmay also constrain the professional latitude that health careproviders have.

  11. Thank You

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