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ֱ initiative featured in national patient safety framework

Thanks to proactive and interprofessional work across the ֱ health network, the Canadian Patient Safety Institute’s recently released second edition of The Safety Competencies includes a case study of the ֱ Faculty Development Patient Safety Series.

“The Safety Competencies: Enhancing Patient Safety Across the Health Professions” (2nd edition, 2020) is designed to improve safety and quality improvement within health and social services education in order to achieve a culture of safety across the healthcare continuum.

“Safety is Everybody’s Business: Applying and Teaching Patient Safety Competencies” is a patient safety workshop series developed here at ֱ. The series is now featured as one of three case studies from across Canada, showcasing effective use of the national Competencies framework.

“It is rewarding to have this recognition from a national organization, and it’s equally rewarding to know that we are influencing patient safety education at a national level,” said Mr. Mark Daly, one of the founders of the workshop series.

Safety is Everybody’s Business

The , which celebrated its fifth anniversary last year, occurs annually over one and a half days and is open to any faculty and staff from ֱ’s clinical network.

The interactive workshop is designed to give participants an understanding of six competencies developed by the Canadian Patient Safety Institute (CPSI), along with practical guidance on how to apply and teach these competencies in clinical settings.

The CPSI learned that the workshop series was applying the original national competency framework and decided to feature the workshop as a case study in the latest edition.

Using the Safety Competencies for faculty development as opposed to undergraduate or graduate education is one unique feature of the workshop series.

The workshop series is also unique in its interprofessional emphasis; participants represent a variety of professions including clinicians, educators, leaders and administrators, which insures a rich interprofessional mix.

The Patient Safety Working Group that leads the series is also very interprofessional, drawing from diverse professions and ֱ Offices, along with representation from three of ֱ’s clinical partners (see below).

“Without the collaboration of all these individuals we could not have launched the series and eventually have received this recognition at a national level,” said Mr. Daly. “I am so proud of our working group.”

Congratulations to the Patient Safety Working Group!

View the (PDF). The ֱ case study (pp. 34-7).

The Patient Safety Working Group

Mark Daly, Office of Interprofessional Education

Rosetta Antonacci, Ingram School of Nursing

Miriam Boillat, Faculty Development Office

Valérie Coulombe, Montreal West Island Integrated University Health and Social Services Centre

Brigitte Desjardins, Integrated Health and Social Services University Network for West-Central Montreal

Nadine Korah, Department of Pediatrics. Montreal Children’s Hospital

Francesca Luconi, Continuing Professional Development Office

Jennifer Nicholls, Faculty Development Office

Susanne Mak, School of Physical and Occupational Therapy

Noémie Auclair-Ouellet, School of Communication Sciences and Disorders

Eileen San José, ֱ Health Centre

Adriana Venturini, School of Physical and Occupational Therapy

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