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New IHI Survey Finds Quality & Safety Training for Health Professions Turning the Corner, Yet Still Work to Be Done
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. & ORLANDO, Fla. --(Business Wire)--
Growing interest in the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's (IHI) Open
School - whose registrants reached 150,000 in more than 50 countries
in 2012 - is echoed in the results of a new survey that finds students
in the health professions are increasingly seeking out training in
quality improvement and patient safety. In the face of a troubled health
care landscape, the survey results underscore a deep dedication among
the next generation of health professionals to build the knowledge and
skills they will need to create a better health and health care future.
In a new survey from IHI, more than 60 percent of students admitted they had witnessed or made an error in patient care, with only half saying they were extremely likely to speak up about an error made by a colleague or a superior. To help address gaps like this, IHI's Open School features a course on "The Power of Speaking Up" (available at http://tinyurl.com/b99tvgk) (Photo: Business Wire)
Commissioned by IHI and conducted by national research firm Kelton, the
survey polled more than 350 medical, nursing, pharmacy and other health
care professional students. Nearly 90 percent of students responding to
the survey believe it is extremely important for health professions
schools to provide training or skills in patient safety, with the
majority of students also identifying training in patient-centered care,
quality improvement and interprofessional teamwork and communications as
extremely important. The good news is that students are beginning to get
what they are looking for - with the vast majority rating their training
in these areas as good or excellent.
"This is a marked and welcome change from where we were four years ago
when we created a curriculum of online courses on the fundamentals of
quality improvement and safety and made it free for all students,
residents, and faculty in the health professions," said Maureen
Bisognano, IHI President and CEO. "Today, not only are students
embracing these principles, but health care educators are creatively
integrating this instruction into their training. Yet, we still have a
long way to go. More than 100,000 people die each year from preventable
errors and our health care system remains plagued with high costs,
waste, and inefficiencies - we can and must do more to address these
urgent issues."
Top Student Concern: Making Harmful or Fatal Errors
Students recognize the gaps that persist and must be addressed. In the
new survey, 43 percent ranked making a harmful or fatal error in patient
care as their top concern when they start working, with more than60
percent admitting they had witnessed or made an error in patient care.
And these fears and mistakes are often kept silent, with only half the
students surveyed saying they were extremely likely to speak up about an
error made by a colleague or a superior. They pointed to fear of being
ostracized (31 percent), fear of being treated poorly (27 percent), or
not being entirely sure what qualifies as an error (24 percent) as key
reasons for their silence. Addressing gaps like these, continuing to
develop relevant course work, and reaching more students worldwide are
top goals for the IHI Open School.
"The onus of fixing health care is on our generation, and we want to
build a system based not only on first-class medical knowledge, but also
on first-class health care delivery," said Alexi Nazem, MD, MBA, a
former IHI Open School Chapter Leader at Yale School of Medicine, and
now a resident at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. "The Open
School provides us with the 'missing curriculum' we need to be smart,
and the like-minded colleagues we need to be strong in order to tackle
the challenges ahead."
Recognizing this need, a number of professional schools worldwide are
integrating the IHI Open School curriculum as a requirement for
students, including Baylor College of Medicine, Clemson University,
Cardiff (UK) University, Texas A&M, University at Buffalo School of
Nursing, University of South Dakota, University of Colorado, University
of Minnesota and Eastern Virginia Medical School.
Students at many of these schools are learning interprofessionally, with
the idea that working together in training will improve communication,
systems and patient care when it comes time to practice. A recent Health
Affairs article highlighted the IHI Open School's role in a
project that integrated quality and safety into medical and nursing
school curricula. Funded by the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation, the
Retooling for Quality and Safety Initiative made strong progress toward
fostering joint learning in health professions schools.
About the Survey The IHI Student Survey was fielded by
Kelton between November 13th and November 27th, 2012, among 336 students
in medical, nursing, pharmacy, or other health care professional
schools, using an email invitation and an online survey and results were
available in early December. Results of any sample are subject to
sampling variation. The magnitude of the variation is measurable and is
affected by the number of interviews and the level of the percentages
expressing the results. In this particular study, the chances are 95 in
100 that a survey result does not vary, plus or minus, by more than 5.4
percentage points from the result that would be obtained if interviews
had been conducted with all persons in the universe represented by the
sample.
About IHI Open School Launched in 2008, the IHI Open School
is transforming health care education around the world by offering
students, residents and faculty free online courses on quality
improvement, patient safety, leadership, health care operations,
population health and patient-centered care. The courses are available
to health professionals for a low annual fee. Developed along with many
of the founders and current leaders of the health care quality
improvement movement, the courses provide a critical foundation for
quality and safety and offer a whole new environment for thinking and
learning about improvement and safety. Intended for any health
profession - including medicine, nursing, pharmacy, public health, and
allied health - the IHI Open School also features myriad free resources
and a growing community network that includes more than 500 Chapters in
more than 50 countries worldwide. Learn more at www.ihi.org/openschool.
About The Institute for Healthcare Improvement IHI is a
leading innovator in health and health care improvement worldwide. For
more than 25 years, we have partnered with an ever-growing community of
visionaries, leaders, and front-line practitioners around the globe to
spark bold, inventive ways to improve the health of individuals and
populations. Together, we build the will for change, seek out innovative
models of care, and spread proven best practices. When it comes to
raising the quality of health for all, IHI sees boundless possibilities
and while we see the walls in front of us, we will not rest until we
reach the other side. Learn more at ihi.org.
IHI Open School video (available here) IHI
Open School Course: "The Power of Speaking Up" (available here) IHI
Open School app (available here)

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/multimedia/home/20121211005875/en/
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