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quality and safety improvements.

      National Initiatives for Quality and Safety

      The IHI (www.ihi.org) is a strong advocate for quality and safety innovations, facilitating collaboration among all professions. Its 100,000 and 5 Million Lives campaigns are just two examples of focused collective efforts for improving outcomes. The IHI Triple Aim has three primary goals for health care – improve population health, reduce costs, and improve the quality of care – all of which align with the 2001 IOM STEEEP model. To address concern for the health care workforce, the Triple Aim was replaced with the Quadruple Aim as a more comprehensive model (Bachynsky, 2020).

      The Patient Safety Movement Foundation (https://patientsafetymovement.org) is a nonprofit professional and consumer organization with the aim to “prevent the preventable.” The goal to achieve zero deaths from preventable health care harm is also endorsed by the International Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua; Goldstein, 2019) and 4,793 hospitals in 48 countries. Others question whether the focus on achieving zero will distract from creating total system safety (Thomas, 2020).

      Bold progress will require bold action and collaboration across the world. The WHO issued the Global Patient Safety Action Plan for 2021–2030 (WHO, 2021). The plan requests all member states to recognize the crisis of patient safety by establishing policies and actions to reduce preventable harm. The report issued a set of policy recommendations for global collaboration and coordination to push forward an agenda for patient safety and quality. WHO also established a yearly World Patient Safety Day, celebrated with informative webinars and education sessions to highlight preventable harm.

Schematic illustration of interprofessional competency domains for education and practice.

      Source: Modified from Interprofessional Education Collaborative Expert Panel (IPEC), 2011, Core Competencies for Interprofessional Collaborative Practice: Report of an Expert Panel. Washington, DC: Interprofessional Education Collaborative.

      Many nursing organizations have identified and developed programs to improve quality and safety. For example, the American Association of Critical‐Care Nurses (AACN; www.aacn.org) developed multiple approaches, including a program on healthy work environments focused on teamwork and collaboration. The Nursing Alliance for Quality Care (see Chapter 2) created one organized nursing voice to ensure that (a) patients receive the right care at the right time from the right professional; (b) nurses actively advocate and are accountable for consumer‐centered, high‐quality health care; and (c) policy‐makers recognize the contributions of nurses in advancing consumer‐centered, high‐quality health care.

      The American Nurses Association also established the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators in 1998, which maintains data on sustained improvement in a designated nursing‐sensitive indicator such as staffing, hospital‐acquired pressure ulcers, falls and prevention of injury from falls, staff satisfaction, and pediatric and psychiatric mental health data (see Chapter 2). The Magnet recognition program standards recognize nursing leadership, continuous quality improvement, and organizational culture. In a bold move that helped transform nursing education, prelicensure and graduate nurse competencies were developed by the QSEN project (see Chapter 3).

      Berwick and Cassel (2020) describe the growth of quality in health care over the past 50 years and the work that remains to be done. Striking a balance between accountability and a culture of growth and learning fosters improvement. Quality and safety involve more than individual accountability; workers must cope with poorly designed protocols and systems. Reducing health care harm is best achieved by preventing errors before they happen. Organizational safety culture builds an environment that helps eliminate discrepancies in care that result from provider actions in delivering care, such as daily safety huddles or briefings to identify and manage high‐risk situations (Meyer, Hill, and Baker, 2020). The compelling case for quality applies safety science built on a systems approach that leads to a culture of safety incorporating just culture, high reliability, and improvement science.

      Safety Science: Building a Safety Culture