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Engaging patients as safety partners : some considerations for ensuring a culturally and linguistically appropriate approach
journal contribution
posted on 2009-04-01, 00:00 authored by Megan-Jane JohnstoneMegan-Jane Johnstone, O KanitsakiEngaging patients as ‘safety partners’ with health service providers to help identify and rectify preventable adverse events in health care is being increasingly accepted in the USA, Australia, and elsewhere as a promising strategy to improve patient safety outcomes. The implications of this trend for patients and families of minority cultural and language backgrounds have not, however, been comprehensively considered. In this article, attention is given to briefly exploring the notion of patient participation in health care and the problematic transposition of the concept into patient safety discourse. The importance of recognising and responding to the critical relationship between culture, language and
patient safety outcomes, and the possible benefits and risks of engaging patients of minority ethnic backgrounds in safety partnership programs are explored. It is suggested that if patient safety engagement/partnership programs are to perform well in cross-cultural health care contexts, they need to be supported by research evidence and appropriately informed by the perspectives and experiences of patients and families/nominated carers from minority cultural and language backgrounds. They also need to be appropriately supported by culturally competent policies and practices across the entire health care system. The importance of robust internationally comparative research on this issue is highlighted.
patient safety outcomes, and the possible benefits and risks of engaging patients of minority ethnic backgrounds in safety partnership programs are explored. It is suggested that if patient safety engagement/partnership programs are to perform well in cross-cultural health care contexts, they need to be supported by research evidence and appropriately informed by the perspectives and experiences of patients and families/nominated carers from minority cultural and language backgrounds. They also need to be appropriately supported by culturally competent policies and practices across the entire health care system. The importance of robust internationally comparative research on this issue is highlighted.
History
Journal
Health policyVolume
90Issue
1Pagination
1 - 7Publisher
Elsevier IrelandLocation
Limerick, IrelandPublisher DOI
ISSN
0168-8510eISSN
1872-6054Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2008, Elsevier Ireland LtdUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
patient safetycross-cultural issuesmigrant populationspatient-provider communicationshared decision-makingScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineHealth Care Sciences & ServicesHealth Policy & ServicesHEALTH-CAREDECISION-MAKINGADVERSE EVENTSPARTICIPATIONLANGUAGEINVOLVEMENTINCIDENTSQUALITYCHOICEIMPACT