Liz, lee, rejeanne“If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail.” –Abraham Maslow

According to the Institute of Medicine, thousands of patients come to harm during the course of their healing due to preventable mistakes. The Joint commission suggests that communication is a top contributor in medical errors. Often caregivers find it difficult to speak up when they see unsafe practices such as clinicians taking shortcuts, breaking rules or lacking competence.

In a study conducted by Vitalsmarts called "Silence Kills" (2005), results showed that the ability of nurses to raise difficult conversations had a direct correlation with patient safety, quality of care, teamwork, employee satisfaction and turnover. In leadership there is no room for intimidation, coercion, bullying or disrespect as a means of influence. More often than not, errors result from a series of system failures that culminate in someone making a mistake.

Healthcare is evolving in a positive direction. Instead of focusing individual blame or a punitive response when a mistake occurs; organizations are working to develop cultures of safety. Scott Griffith suggests a collaborative Just Culture model that balances system design with accountability for behavior. He promotes an effective strategy of positive coaching that is supportive, compassionate and transparent. He encourages leaders to model behaviors that make it safe for others to disclose mistakes when they occur and to speak up about safety concerns.

Renown healthcare leader, Erie Chapman continually inspires us to approach our patients with authentic intention and to be open to the vulnerability that accompanies illness and suffering. "When deep need is met with a loving response it is a sacred encounter" (Chapman).

 Leaders can begin by being vulnerable and admitting some of their own mistakes to cultivate an atmosphere of openness and trust among caregivers. This will allow the sacred to manifest in their relationships, as well. As Erie so wisely counsels, "the number one job of a leader is to care for the people who care for the patients."

Liz Sorensen Wessel RN, MSN

Photo: August 6, 2006 Rejie, Lee and grandma Wessel-3 generations

4 responses to “Days 60-61 – A Shifting Culture”

  1. erie chapman Avatar
    erie chapman

    Thank you, Liz. You touch on such a crucial aspect of health care and how many hospital injuries and infections are caused by communication and relationship mistakes.
    To a surgeon, every patient provides an opportunity to cut because that is his or her training. The eye doctor sees eyes, the ear doctor sees ears, the dermatologist sees skin. Sometimes each of them misses the whole human being.
    It is the nurse who can often be the best balance for all of this – if she or he is wise enough and courageous enough to step forward when needed.

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  2. sbeng Avatar
    sbeng

    Liz: a well written subject on “the culture of change”. Erie, greatly appreciate your counsel on the number one job of a leader is to care for the people who cares for the patients and to the nurses “if he or she is wise enough and courageous enough to step forward when needed”. This was my experience when I had to step forward when needed. Not long after being a new graduate from Nursing School (I greatly cherished my new profession and was very much on guard against any mistakes I could have made that could ruin my livelihood and jeopardize the patient’s condition) I worked in a hospital(not in this country). The Charge Nurse an austere looking older woman handed me a medication (a tablet) to give to the patient. If I would not have not spoken up and asked her what was the name of the medication I would have landed into great trouble. It was the wrong medication and it would have made the patient’s muscular condition worse. By communicating with the one in authority averted the impending problem to the patient and my license to practice as a nurse was not be in jeopardy.

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  3. Maureen McDermott Avatar
    Maureen McDermott

    Thank you Liz for raising our awareness and our responsibility to be authentic, sincere, and loving in our ministry of care.

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  4. Cheri Cancelliere Avatar

    Liz, Your beautiful photo depicting three generations perfectly portrays a sacred encounter. I am reading “Boundaries for Leaders” by Henry Cloud right now. He makes the significant point that “leaders get what they create, and what they allow.” I will be forever grateful for Erie’s call to healthcare leaders to create sacred encounters that allow excellence to thrive. For those of us who are caregivers and daily embrace radical loving care as a way of life, each clinician who recognizes the humanity behind the medical record lessens our burden. Each act of simple kindness to help us and our loved one is a gift.

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