Improving patient safety in Libya: insights from the British health system perspective
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Accepted version
Author(s)
Elmontsri, M
Almashrafi, A
Dubois, E
Banarsee, R
Majeed, A
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Purpose: The overall aim of patient safety is to make health care safe for both patients and health professionals. The purpose of this paper is to explore the UK’s patient safety improvement programmes over the past 15 years and whether lessons can be learnt to improve patient safety in Libya.
Design/methodology/approach: Publications focused on patient safety in the UK were searched in academic databases. A content analysis was conducted on the selected publications.
Findings: In Britain, several initiatives have been undertaken over the past fifteen years to improve patient safety and the British health system. Many stakeholders are involved including regulatory and professional bodies, educational providers and non-governmental organisations. Lessons can be learnt from the British journey in improving patient safety in Libya Research limitations/implications:
Practical implications: Developing a national patient safety strategy for the country which reflects the context and needs is paramount. Above all, patient safety strategy in Libya should reference internationally approved guidelines, evidence and policy as well as learning from the unique British experience.
Social implications:
Originality/value: This review is first to examine patient safety improvement strategies that were adopted in Britain to help developing countries develop local strategies based on lessons learnt from Britain’s unique experience.
Design/methodology/approach: Publications focused on patient safety in the UK were searched in academic databases. A content analysis was conducted on the selected publications.
Findings: In Britain, several initiatives have been undertaken over the past fifteen years to improve patient safety and the British health system. Many stakeholders are involved including regulatory and professional bodies, educational providers and non-governmental organisations. Lessons can be learnt from the British journey in improving patient safety in Libya Research limitations/implications:
Practical implications: Developing a national patient safety strategy for the country which reflects the context and needs is paramount. Above all, patient safety strategy in Libya should reference internationally approved guidelines, evidence and policy as well as learning from the unique British experience.
Social implications:
Originality/value: This review is first to examine patient safety improvement strategies that were adopted in Britain to help developing countries develop local strategies based on lessons learnt from Britain’s unique experience.
Editor(s)
Hurst, K
Date Issued
2018-04-16
Date Acceptance
2017-08-31
Citation
International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance, 2018, 31 (3), pp.237-248
ISSN
0952-6862
Publisher
Emerald
Start Page
237
End Page
248
Journal / Book Title
International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance
Volume
31
Issue
3
Copyright Statement
© Emerald Publishing Limited 2018. Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. Licensed re-use rights only
Identifier
http://emeraldgrouppublishing.com/authors/pdf/embargo.pdf
Subjects
Governance
Patient safety
Policy
Quality healthcare
Risk management
Training
1117 Public Health And Health Services
Health Policy & Services
Notes
As part of the post-2017 HEFCE (Higher Education Funding Council for England) REF (Research Excellence Framework) policy, if you are an author based at a UK research institution and wish to include this article in a future REF assessment, you will need to make a ‘closed deposit’ of your accepted article to your institutional repository (IR). A ‘closed deposit’, as defined by HEFCE, takes place when an Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM) and the surrounding Metadata are deposited to the author’s Institutional Repository, with only the article’s Metadata visible in the IR until the relevant embargo period has expired following publication in the relevant journal. The embargo periods of Emerald journals can be seen here: http://emeraldgrouppublishing.com/authors/pdf/embargo.pdf
Publication Status
Published