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Perspectives on Anesthesia and Perioperative Patient Safety: Past, Present, and Future

Megha Karkera Kanjia, C. Dean Kurth, Daniel Hyman, Eric Williams, Anna M. Varughese

2024Anesthesiology13 citationsDOI

Abstract

During the past 70 years, patient safety science has evolved through four organizational frameworks known as Safety-0, Safety -1, Safety-2, and Safety-3. Their evolution reflects the realization over time that blaming people, chasing errors, fixing one-offs, and regulation would not create the desired patient safety. In Safety-0, the oldest framework, harm events arise from clinician failure; event prevention relies on better staffing, education, and basic standards. In Safety-1, used by hospitals, harm events arise from individual and/or system failures. Safety is improved through analytics, workplace culture, high reliability principles, technology, and quality improvement. Safety-2 emphasizes clinicians' adaptability to prevent harm events in an everchanging environment, using resilience engineering principles. Safety-3, used by aviation, adds system design and control elements to Safety-1 and Safety-2, deploying human factors, design-thinking, and operational control or feedback to prevent and respond to harm events. Safety-3 represents a potential way for anesthesia and perioperative care to become safer.

Topics & Concepts

Patient safetySAFERHarmMedicineStaffingOrganizational safetyRisk analysis (engineering)NursingComputer securityHealth careOrganizational culturePublic relationsComputer sciencePsychologySocial psychologyEconomicsEconomic growthOrganizational engineeringPolitical scienceOrganizational behavior and human resourcesCardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical OutcomesPatient Safety and Medication ErrorsGlobal Health and Surgery
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