MJA
MJA

Partnership with patients to improve patient safety

Stephanie M Newell, Dorothy A Jones and Martin J Hatlie
Med J Aust 2010; 192 (2): . || doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2010.tb03418.x
Published online: 18 January 2010

“We cannot stay silent any longer, waiting and watching as more people are harmed in health care.”1

Error in health care remains a significant problem in Australia, despite more than a decade of efforts to remedy it. Since the landmark 1994 Quality in Australian Health Care Study (QAHCS),2 Australian governments, both state and federal, have introduced various clinical governance, health policy and structural reforms to improve the quality of patient care and reduce preventable harm to patients. However, adverse events have not been measurably reduced. Many acknowledge that barriers to change are embedded in the culture and norms of health care. So, 15 years after the QAHCS and 5 years after a follow-up editorial in the Journal by Wilson and Van Der Weyden3 noting that health care was no safer and calling for a more imaginative strategy to improve patient safety, it is necessary to consider new approaches — not just more of the same. One such approach is to enable patients, carers and families who have experienced poor-quality care and preventable health care harm to develop solutions in partnership with clinicians, health providers and policymakers.

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