56 episodes

Members and guests chat about a wide range of child health topics - from health inequalities to climate change, from paediatric training to quality improvement.

RCPCH Podcasts Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health

    • Science
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

Members and guests chat about a wide range of child health topics - from health inequalities to climate change, from paediatric training to quality improvement.

    Patient safety 5 – The impact of healthcare inequality on patient safety

    Patient safety 5 – The impact of healthcare inequality on patient safety

    Health inequalities are widening in paediatrics. Those that are more disadvantaged experience more safety issues whilst in health care.  If we can make our healthcare systems more equitable for the children and young people we can for, they will be safer in our care.
    In episode 5 of our series on paediatric patient safety, we speak with Dr Helen Stewart, Dr Cian Wade and Dr Mimi Malhotra to explore how patient safety and health inequalities are inextricably linked. Tackling healthcare inequalities can improve safety and vice versa. 
    Dr Stewart shares her knowledge and experience as the RCPCH Officer for Health Improvement as to how our children are impacted by health inequalities. Dr Wade and Dr Malhotra discuss their BMJ paper, Action on patient safety can reduce health inequalities, and explore some of the improvement avenues that are available to clinicians and service providers.
    Thank you for listening.
    Dr Natalie Wyatt, RCPCH Clinical Fellow and Jonathan Bamber, RCPCH Head of Quality Improvement | Produced by 18Sixty
    Please be advised that this podcast series contains stories relating to child death and harm. All views, thoughts and opinions expressed belong to the guests and not necessarily to their employer, linked organisations or RCPCH.
    Download transcript (PDF)
    About the Patient Safety series
    As doctors we ‘first, do no harm’. However, the systems in which we work are rife with safety issues and resultant harm. In thinking about how to improve this, we have brought together leaders in the field to discuss challenging and thought-provoking issues around keeping our children safe in healthcare settings.
    We hope you will be entertained, educated and energised to make strides in improving the safety of the children that you care for.
    The RCPCH Patient Safety Portal has lots of resources, including a wealth of learning about paediatric patient safety. The RCPCH health inequalities programme of work can be found on our key topics pages.
    It is imperative to turn this knowledge into action through improvement activities. 
    About the speakers
    Dr Helen Stewart is a Consultant in Paediatric Emergency Medicine at Sheffield Children’s Hospital. She also has an interest in public health and health inequalities, which has led to her becoming the Officer for Health Improvement at RCPCH. Dr Cian Wade completed a National Medical Director Clinical Fellowship with NHS England. He is a Fulbright Scholar who recently completed a Master of Public Health at Harvard University and now consults for health systems and healthcare providers. Dr Mimi Malhotra completed a National Medical Director Clinical Fellowship with the Health Foundation. Dr Malhotra continues to work as a respiratory trainee in London with ab honorary clinical lectureship at UCL. Topics/organisations/papers referenced in this episode
    Wade, C, Malhotra, A.M., et al (2022). Action of patient safety can reduce health inequalities. BMJ North West & North Wales critical care transport service Michael Marmot Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) RCPCH Health Improvement Committee National Medical Directors Fellowship The Health Foundation  RCPCH Child health inequalities driven by child poverty in the UK - position statement Increased risk of perioperative pulmonary embolism and sepsis in black patients (Urban Institute) Increase risk of adverse drug events in black people (Medical Care) MBRRACE study: A comparison of the care of Asian, Black and White women who have experienced a stillbirth or neonatal death Racial and ethnic differences in bystander CPR for witnessed cardiac arrest (The New England Journal of Medicine) Skin Deep WHAM (Wellbeing and Health Action Movement) health inequalities map Race-based vs race-conscious model of medicine (The Lancet) Decentralisation of public services in Greater Manchester (PDF) Sugar tax explained Vaping in children (RCPCH response to Government plan to ban disposable vapes) Health and Social Care C

    • 1 hr
    Patient safety 4 - Involving children, young people and their families in making healthcare safer

    Patient safety 4 - Involving children, young people and their families in making healthcare safer

    It is imperative that children and young people are central to the co-design and co-production of our patient safety improvement interventions.
    In this episode, we speak with Dr Jane Runnacles, consultant paediatrician at St. George's Hospital, and Dr Victoria Dublon, paediatric diabetes consultant at the Royal Free Hospital. Both are champions of improvement work that puts the young person and their needs first.
    As Jane and Victoria describe, involving children, young people and their families in improvement work improves the experience and outcome for all involved. There are fantastic examples of co-creating and co-producing safety improvements in healthcare.
    We discuss the practicalities of how to do this and who to involve in your healthcare setting, and we hear about some of Jane and Victoria’s successes.
    Thank you for listening.
    Dr Natalie Wyatt, RCPCH Clinical Fellow and Jonathan Bamber RCPCH Head of Quality Improvement 
    Produced by 18Sixty
    Please be advised that this podcast series contains stories relating to child death and harm. All views, thoughts and opinions expressed belong to the guests and not necessarily to their employer, linked organisations or RCPCH.
    Download transcript (PDF) 
    About the patient safety series
    As doctors we ‘first, do no harm’. However, the systems in which we work are rife with safety issues and resultant harm. In thinking about how to improve this, we have brought together leaders in the field to discuss challenging and thought-provoking issues around keeping our children safe in healthcare settings.
    We hope you will be entertained, educated and energised to make strides in improving the safety of the children that you care for.
    The RCPCH Patient Safety Portal has lots of resources. And our engaging children and young people web pages can help you get started on your engagement journey to effectively work with children and young people to improve their healthcare. 
    Dr Victoria Dublon is based at the Royal Free Hospital and part of the Trust-wide diabetes team. She has been a paediatric diabetes consultant for eight years, working primarily at the Royal Free Hospital as well as running clinics at Barnet Hospital and Chase Farm Hospital. As a registrar, she trained in adolescent health as well as endocrinology and diabetes and this continues to be a big part of her work. Victoria is involved in improvement work within the department as well as being a champion of ‘Me First’, striving to put the young person and their needs first.
    Dr Jane Runnacles is a consultant in ambulatory paediatrics at St George's hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London and clinical governance lead for her department. She has an interest in acute paediatrics, simulation and quality improvement. During her postgraduate training in London, she was awarded distinction in her MA in clinical education and spent a year as a Darzi clinical leadership fellow at Great Ormond Street Hospital. Jane is a Training Programme Director for the London School of Paediatrics and leads their leadership and QI education programmes.
    Topics/organisations/papers referenced in this episode
    Great Ormond Street Hospital Royal Free Hospital Darzi Fellowship Peter Lachman RCPCH SAFE Collaborative RCPCH QI Central Don Berwick Whiteboard communication project (on QI Central) Yincent Tse NHS blog - Asking "What Matters To You?" NHS - Co-production Paediatric Early Warning System (PEWS) St George's Hospital St George’s Hospital - Children and Young People’s Council Wac Arts WHO World Patient Safety Day (17 September) ‘Listening to you’ project at Birmingham Children's Hospital NHS Patient Safety Incident Response Framework Safety huddles (part of Situation Awareness for Everyone)  

    • 53 min
    Patient safety 3 - How do we improve how we learn from harm?

    Patient safety 3 - How do we improve how we learn from harm?

    It is not enough just to collect data on harm occurring to children in healthcare settings. We need the data to be robust, comparable across the NHS and for it to be transformed into effective, meaningful changes in outcome.
    In episode 3 of our series on paediatric patient safety, we speak with Dr Damian Roland, a paediatric emergency medicine clinician scientist and head of service for the Children's Emergency Department at Leicester Royal Infirmary.
    As Damian discusses on the podcast, in order to learn from harm and prevent it occurring again we need to collect data and investigate what is occurring across the healthcare system rather than looking to individuals. Removing the individual, more punitive approach to harm investigations could improve the quality of how we record and report harm.
    There is already a wealth of learning available from a range of sources including national reports, coroner’s findings described in regulation 28 reports to prevent future death and large-scale reviews like those of the Health Services Safety Investigations Body. We can investigate whether the causes of harm identified in these reports are occurring where we work and make proactive steps to avert it.
    Damian also shares the progress of the SPOT programme (System-wide Paediatric Observation Tracking). This looks to reduce harm and improve how we learn from harm by creating a standardised common language to identify and discuss children whose health is deteriorating.
    Thank you for listening.  
    Hosted by Dr Natalie Wyatt, RCPCH Clinical Fellow and Jonathan Bamber RCPCH Head of Quality Improvement | Produced by 18Sixty
    Download transcript (PDF)
    Please be advised that this series contains stories relating to child death and harm. All views, thoughts and opinions expressed in this podcast series belong to the guests and not necessarily to their employer, linked organisations or RCPCH. 
    About the Patient Safety series
    As doctors we ‘first, do no harm’. However, the systems in which we work are rife with safety issues and resultant harm. In thinking about how to improve this, we have brought together leaders in the field to discuss challenging and thought-provoking issues around keeping our children safe in healthcare settings. We hope you will be entertained, educated and energised to make strides in improving the safety of the children that you care for.
    The RCPCH Patient Safety Portal at https://safety.rcpch.ac.uk has lots of resources. It includes a wealth of information summarising reports and investigations that identify what puts children at risk of harm. It is imperative to turn this knowledge into action through improvement activities.
    More about Dr Damian Roland
    Damian is a paediatric emergency medicine clinician scientist and is head of service for the Children's Emergency Department at Leicester Royal Infirmary. Among his many achievements, Damian has been focused on addressing the challenges of identifying deterioration in health in children. He created the Paediatric Observation Priority Score for Children's Emergency Care and currently he is instrumental in the NHS England SPOT programme.
    Topics/organisations/papers referenced in this episode
    John Madar (PDF) Datix Health Services Safety Investigations Body Royal College of Emergency Medicine Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health René Amalberti Adrian Plunkett Learning from Excellence David Sinton (on X) POPS (Paediatric Observation Priority Score for Children’s Emergency Care) - (PDF) Swiss Cheese Model (on National Library for Medicine) NHSE SPOT: System-wide Paediatric Observation Tracking programme - guidance Emma Lim Critically Careful forums (University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust) Peter Lachman Ronny Cheung Eric Hollnagel: From Safety-1 to Safety II (PDF) Charles Vincent Mary Dixon Woods: How to improve healthcare improvement - BMJ The Health Foundation Creating Communities of Practice Rhizomology - Rhizomatic Knowledge Co

    • 52 min
    Patient safety 2 - If we are psychologically safe, children are safer in our care

    Patient safety 2 - If we are psychologically safe, children are safer in our care

    Psychological safety in healthcare settings is the condition in which you feel included, safe to learn, safe to contribute and safe to challenge the status quo - without fear of being embarrassed, marginalised or punished. And it's an essential foundation in building a safety culture.
    Individually, feeling psychologically safe improves performance and innovation, while feeling unsafe reduces productivity and harms retention. In a highly productive team, it is about feeling safe to take risks, to learn from each other and to feel resilient and able to tackle the difficult and varying challenges of healthcare with a healthy mindset.
    This is the second episode in our patient safety series and features Dr Dal Hothi and Dr Jess Morgan. Learn how you can reflect on your own behaviour, champion effective communication and create a psychologically safe space within your team.
    Hosts: Dr Natalie Wyatt, RCPCH Clinical Fellow and Jonathan Bamber, RCPCH Head of Quality Improvement
    Produced by 18Sixty
    Please be advised that this podcast series contains stories relating to child death and harm. All views, thoughts and opinions expressed belong to the guests and not necessarily to their employer, linked organisations or RCPCH.
    If you are a healthcare professional and you are worried that you are suffering with burnout please speak to your team, your GP or Practitioner Health.
    Download transcript (PDF)
    About the speakers
    Dr Dal Hothi is a paediatric nephrologist at Great Ormond Street Hospital. She's also a Director of Leadership Development at the Faculty of Medical Leadership and Management, as well as being an Officer for Lifelong Careers at the RCPCH.
    Dr Jess Morgan is a paediatric doctor and Dinwoodie RCPCH Fellow who leads on the RCPCH Thrive Paediatrics Project along with Dal.
    About the patient safety podcast series
    As doctors we ‘first, do no harm’. However, the systems in which we work are rife with safety issues and resultant harm. In thinking about how to improve this, we have brought together leaders in the field to discuss challenging and thought-provoking issues around keeping our children safe in healthcare settings.
    We hope you will be entertained, educated, and energised to make strides in improving the safety of the children that you care for.
    To learn more, visit the RCPCH Patient Safety Portal and begin your journey in improving your own psychological safety and that of those you work with.
    Links for topics/organisations/papers referenced in this episode
    Dinwoodie Thrive Paediatrics at RCPCH Amy Edmondson and psychological safety Tim Clark’s four stage model of psychological safety Freedom to Speak Up (The National Guardian) Charles Vincent ("Safety is not defined by the absence of negative outcomes") - The Health Foundation: The measurement and monitoring of safety

    • 45 min
    Patient safety 1 - How can we build a culture of safety in paediatric healthcare?

    Patient safety 1 - How can we build a culture of safety in paediatric healthcare?

    Healthcare is inherently risky and so as child health professionals we need to make patient safety a priority in all our actions. We need to think about safety all the time. 
    In episode 1 of our series on paediatric patient safety, we speak with Dr Peter Lachman, who develops and delivers programmes for clinical leaders in quality improvement at the Royal College of Physicians in Dublin.
    As Peter explains on the podcast, we healthcare professionals need to know patient safety theory - but, more importantly, we need to know how to apply it, drive improvement and create a workplace culture that fosters safe working practices.
    Everyone - from the most junior member of the team to the most senior paediatric clinical leader - needs to think about patient safety all day every day. A safe culture takes time to build. Shared activities such as handover, huddles and debrief can model good behaviour and benefit performance. Repeating behaviours that represent a safe culture can create a virtuous cycle which can change deeply held attitudes and beliefs, then ultimately the safe culture overall.
    Thank you for listening.
    Dr Natalie Wyatt, RCPCH Clinical Fellow and Jonathan Bamber RCPCH Head of Quality Improvement
    Produced by 18Sixty
    Please be advised that this series contains stories relating to child death and harm. All views, thoughts and opinions expressed in this podcast series belong to the guests and not necessarily to their employer, linked organisations or RCPCH.
    Download transcript (PDF)
    About the Patient safety podcast series
    As doctors we ‘first, do no harm’. However, the systems in which we work are rife with safety issues and resultant harm. In thinking about how to improve this, we have brought together leaders in the field to discuss challenging and thought-provoking issues around keeping our children safe in healthcare settings. We hope you will be entertained, educated, and energised to make strides in improving the safety of the children that you care for.
    There are lots of resources that expand on this on the RCPCH Patient Safety Portal, including the theory of patient safety culture and examples of how people across the UK are doing this well. Visit at https://safety.rcpch.ac.uk.
    More about Dr Peter Lachman
    Dr Peter Lachman develops and delivers programmes to develop clinical leaders in quality improvement at the Royal College of Physicians in Dublin. He works with HSE Global in Africa, and he was Chief Executive Officer of the International Society for Quality in Healthcare (ISQua) from 1 May 2016 to 30 April 2021. Peter was a Health Foundation Quality Improvement Fellow at IHI in 2005-2006 and then went on to be the Deputy Medical Director with the lead for Patient Safety at Great Ormond Street Hospital 2006-2016. Peter was also a Consultant Paediatrician at the Royal Free Hospital in London specialising in the challenge of long-term conditions for children.
    Peter is the lead editor of the OUP Handbook on Patient Safety published in April 2022; Co-Editor of the OUP Handbook on Medical Leadership and Management published in December 2022; and Editor of the OUP Handbook on Quality Improvement to be published in 2024.
    Topics/organisations/papers referenced in this podcast
    ISQUA (International Society for Quality in Healthcare) Oxford Professional Practice: Handbook Of Patient Safety IHI (Institute for Health Improvement) Human factors - on RCPCH Patient Safety Portal S.A.F.E. Collaborative - on RCPCH Patient Safety Portal Cincinnati Childrens Hospital patient safety Paediatric Early Warning System (NHS England) BMJ Quality & Safety journal Lachman, P., Linkson, L., Evans, T., Clausen, H., & Hothi, D. (2015). Developing person-centred analysis of harm in a paediatric hospital: a quality improvement report. BMJ quality & safety, 24(5), 337–344 Health Foundation A framework for measuring quality, with Professor Charles Vincent et al WellChild: the national charity for sick children Applied hu

    • 1 hr
    The state of digital child health today - an interview with Professor Sam Shah

    The state of digital child health today - an interview with Professor Sam Shah

    Richard Burley, Executive Director of Digital talks with Professor Shah about how digital technology can support child health, and how paediatricians can embrace it - with a dose of healthy scepticism.
    Professor Sam Shah is Chief Medical Strategy Officer at men's health company, Numan, and Honorary Lecturer at University College London's Global Business School for Health. He spoke at RCPCH Conference 2023 with a session titled, 'Could healthcare technology address the challenges in child health? Richard Burley here at the College was fortunate to be in the audience and invited Sam to discuss further.
    As Sam notes on the podcast, there is no shortage of technology from mobile apps to wearables. But, he says there's a challenge, especially as we look to reduce anxieties:
    "...how we try and make the environment of child health - really, the treatment end - more accessible to children, young people and their families. And also less imposing, less scary. Especially that moment when families will be scared about accessing treatment, when children will be in unfamiliar environments."
    Sam and Richard talk about examples where digital technologies, particularly augmented and virtual reality, are making a real difference. They consider the unique experiences of children and young people as patients, and the differing needs of communities around language, culture and digital maturity. They step into the thorny issues on privacy, security and safety - and how digital tech intersects with real-life clinical care.
    Sam finishes with practical advice on how paediatricians can identify, evaluate and use digital technology in their practice.
    Download transcript

    • 30 min

Customer Reviews

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schipqld ,

Who would have thought!!!!!

Congratulations this episode on teaching pill swallowing is a true diamond that
1) improves quality of care for the kids
2) improves service provision in time management but most importantly getting kids to feel in control of their chronic disease health self management journey .
Loved learning from this team that display joy and passion in the fact they truly make a difference in the lives of many..
Sincere thanks ❤️

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