Publish date: 16 September 2024

patient safety.pngWorld Patient Safety Day is a campaign for all stakeholders in the health care system to work together and share engagement to improve patient safety. World Patient Safety Day 2024 will be observed on 17 September under the theme “Get it right, make it safe!”

The theme for this year is on improving diagnosis for patient safety, highlighting the critical importance of correct and timely diagnosis in ensuring patient safety and improving health outcomes. This includes a focus on communication of clinical diagnosis to be able to work collaboratively with those we care for.

The theme of this year’s event is “Improving diagnosis for patient safety”.

Errors can happen at every stage of the diagnostic process and can happen in all healthcare settings. Diagnostic errors can be broadly divided into three categories:

  1. Delayed diagnosis – where harm is caused because of a health condition not being identified at an earlier stage. This may happen because of failure to use the correct tests, outdated forms of assessment or failure to act on results of monitoring or testing.
  2. Incorrect diagnosis – where the wrong diagnosis is made and the true cause is then discovered later on. This can lead to patients receiving the wrong treatments, that may evenbe harmful. They also may not receive the appropriate treatment for their condition.
  3. Missed diagnosis – where a patient’s illness or health condition is not identified, which can result in their condition worsening and avoidable harm because they are not receiving any treatment.

Objectives of World Patient Safety Day 2024

Through the slogan “Get it right, make it safe”, WHO is calling for concerted efforts to significantly reduce diagnostic errors through a variety of interventions rooted in systems thinking, human factors and actively engaging patients, their families, health workers and healthcare leaders. These interventions include—but are not limited to—making sure clinicians have a complete patient history, undertaking thorough clinical examinations, improving access to diagnostic tests, implementing methods to measure and learn from diagnostic errors, and adopting technology-based solutions.

As part of this, WHO has set four objectives:

  1. Raise global awareness of errors in diagnosis contributing to patient harm and emphasise the pivotal role of correct, timely and safe diagnosis in improving patient safety.
  2. Give prominence to diagnostic safety in patient safety policy and clinical practice at all levels of health care, aligned with the Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021–2030.
  3. Foster collaboration among policy-makers, health care leaders, health workers, patient organisations, and other stakeholders in advancing correct, timely and safe diagnosis.
  4. Empower patients and families to actively engage with health workers and health care leaders to improve diagnostic processes.

You can support this by

  • ensuring that you have completed your mandatory clinical training, to allow for early recognition of deterioration in any patient’s condition and knowing how to escalate/refer on to the best support to meet their needs.
  • Ensuring that your communication with patients around diagnosis and treatment plans is clear and in a format that they can understand.

 

At Mersey Care we benefit from co-production with patients/service users across many of our care pathways. In patient safety we are supported by our patient safety partners to ensure the voice of our local population is heard.

If you have an questions, please contact PSIRF@merseycare.nhs.uk