The second day of the 11th Annual World Patient Safety, Science
& Technology Summit, presented by the Patient Safety Movement
Foundation (PSMF) on the UC Irvine campus, underscored the theme of
collaboration as essential in creating a future in which no
patients are harmed by preventable medical errors and technologies
continue to evolve at an accelerated pace to advance patient
care.
This press release features multimedia. View
the full release here:
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240907191633/en/
The Global Interprofessional Patient
Safety Fellowship at the 2024 PSMF Summit. From left to right: Dr.
Michael A.E. Ramsay, Chief Executive Officer of PSMF; Dr. Mike
Durkin, Chair of PSMF and Senior Advisor on Patient Safety Policy
and Leadership, Institute of Global Health Innovation, Imperial
College London; Luis Torres Torija Arguelles, MD, MBA, Ambassador
of PSMF, Mexico; Natalia Camargo, RN and healthcare quality
management specialist, Sao Paulo, Brazil; Afifa Munawar, BScN,
MSPH, Technical Officer, Quality Patient Safety and Hospital Sector
of WHO Country Office Pakistan; Angeli Merci Mejia Porto, MD,
FPOGS, Obstetrician and Gynecologist at Region II Trauma and
Medical Center, Philippines; Dr. Peter Lachman, Lead Faculty
Quality Improvement, Royal College of Physicians of Ireland; Sanaz
Massoumi, MS, PhD, Chief Operating Officer of PSMF; Joe Kiani,
Founder of the Patient Safety Movement Foundation. (Photo: Business
Wire)
“The future of healthcare is rapidly changing around the world,”
said PSMF Founder Joe Kiani. “We need all hands on deck, including
patients and their families. I hope everyone walks away from this
year’s Summit with clarity on how they will contribute to reaching
zero preventable medical harm. The most important lesson is that we
don’t need to do it alone. We need a network where we can all be
there for each other and share both the challenges and solutions.
If you haven’t already done so, please join our Patient Safety
Leadership Association.”
“Today’s presentations at the World Patient Safety, Science
& Technology Summit showed that there is a real need for
patients and their families to work together with doctors, nurses,
pharmacists, and therapists to challenge the current model and
demand change so that health systems consistently deliver open and
transparent access to the level of avoidable harm,” stated Dr. Mike
Durkin, Chair of the PSMF Board of Directors and the former
National Director of Patient Safety for the UK’s National Health
Service. “They should also go further to challenge their political
representatives to deliver health systems to provide equitable and
inclusive delivery to every member of their population.”
Dr. Sanaz Massoumi, PSMF’s Chief Operating Officer, spoke next
on forging the future of patient safety, stating, “Fostering a
culture of safety is a holistic approach that engages the entire
system in prioritizing patient safety at the core of every
decision-making process, proactively assessing and mitigating
risks.”
In a video-taped message presented during the morning session,
Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World
Health Organization, alerted attendees to the challenges to patient
safety posed by attacks on healthcare workers in areas of conflict,
numbering more than 7,000 attacks in 21 different countries and
territories resulting in over 2,200 deaths since 2018. He urged,
“Health workers and health facilities must never be attacked and
must be actively protected even in the most arduous conditions. We
must take a united stand for the protection and safety of patients,
health workers, and health facilities.”
The Rt Hon Jeremy Hunt MP, in another recorded message, told
attendees how he got involved with Joe Kiani and the Patient Safety
Movement Foundation and their efforts to persuade the World Health
Organization to set up a World Patient Safety Day (which takes
place on September 17). He remarked, “I was taken on this journey
actually not by medical experts but by ordinary members of the
public who’d lost loved ones in the most tragic of circumstances.
That told me something needed to change.”
In the day’s first keynote, Dr. John Wyte, Chief Medical Officer
at WebMD, discussed the impact of misinformation on patient safety
at a time when more and more people are relying on internet
searches for health-related information (one billion queries a
day!), mobile apps, wearable devices, and other emergent
technologies.
Representing the host venue for this year’s Summit, Dr. Michael
Stamos, who serves as Dean of the UC Irvine School of Medicine,
described how the UCI School of Medicine and the health center’s
leadership are structured to optimally support an improved safety
culture among physicians and staff and to promote better patient
outcomes.
Updating attendees on the US Department of Health and Human
Services’ efforts to improve patient safety, Amy Ashcraft, Deputy
Regional Inspector General from the Office of Inspector General,
emphasized the importance of tracking and reporting all harm
incidents and data transparency. She also outlined HHS’s
initiatives to protect patients through the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ) and Center for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS).
Dr. Daniel Cole, the Executive Director for Professional Affairs
at the American Board of Anesthesiology, explored the
transformative impacts of emerging technologies, including remote
monitoring devices, medical imaging, and healthcare data analytics,
on perioperative care.
Using advanced technologies, including AI, to help protect
patients and improve their care was an important theme throughout
this year’s Summit. Dr. Michael Ramsay, PSMF’s Chief Executive
Officer, observed, “We are at an important crossroads in the
evolution of patient safety. New technologies enable us to monitor
patient vitals remotely, AI can be used as a check against
misdiagnosis and to predict harm events, and telehealth expands
healthcare access and equity. Through our ongoing collaborative
efforts and sharing data, healthcare providers in partnership with
Med-Tech, government agencies, patients, and other stakeholders can
protect patients in ways that were unimaginable a decade ago.”
Like the keynote presentations, panels during the Summit’s
second day continued to build on the previous day’s insights and
momentum. In one panel, leading patient advocates addressed the
important issue of engaging patients and their family members, and
Dr. Mike Durkin led another panel to discuss the state of affairs
in patient safety around the world.
PATIENT SAFETY MOVEMENT FOUNDATION
In 2012, Joe Kiani founded the non-profit Patient Safety
Movement Foundation to eliminate preventable medical errors in
hospitals. His team worked with patient safety experts from around
the world to create Actionable Evidence-Based Practices that
address top challenges. Hospitals can make a formal commitment to
ZERO preventable deaths, and healthcare technology companies are
asked to sign the Open Data Pledge to share their data so that
predictive algorithms can be developed to identify errors before
they become fatal. The PSMF was established through the support of
the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation, and Competition in
Healthcare.
View source
version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240907191633/en/
Patient Safety Movement Foundation Irene Mulonni,
irene@mulonni.com | (858) 859-7001