Kia kounga te mātauranga mō te rāngai hauora, hauātanga hoki
Quality improvement education for the health and disability sector
Kia kounga te mātauranga mō te rāngai hauora, hauātanga hoki
Te Tāhū Hauora Health Quality & Safety Commission offers a range of quality improvement education for the health and disability sector. This includes the Improving together education series, and other quality improvement education supported or developed by Te Tāhū Hauora.
For more information or to register your interest in any of the following programmes, please email learning.capability@hqsc.govt.nz.
Te Tāhū Hauora offers two micro-credentials on the New Zealand Qualifications and Credentials Framework:
This programme provides foundation-level quality improvement knowledge and skills for everybody participating in health and disability service improvement, consumers and the workforce. This ‘introduction’ is to help everyone in the sector to understand the importance of improving quality and safety in health care. Improving together in an Aotearoa New Zealand context means understanding our responsibilities as Te Tiriti partners to ensure equity of health outcomes and the impact our history of colonisation has on the health and wellbeing of Māori.
Details:
This programme provides participants with a basic knowledge of quality improvement and safety science, and an understanding of simple quality and safety tools.
Details:
The programme develops and expands on the improvement skills and knowledge required to become an effective facilitator of change in the participants’ area of work.
Details:
Applications for the Facilitators programme are currently closed. For more information or to register your interest in the next intake, please email learning.capability@hqsc.govt.nz.
This programme develops and expands on the improvement skills and knowledge required to become an effective facilitator of change. The curriculum is designed for health care professionals who have a major portion of their work focused on change, improvement and/or innovation.
Details:
Applications for the Advisors programme are currently closed. For more information or to register your interest in the next intake, please email learning.capability@hqsc.govt.nz.
An opportunity for health leaders to explore contemporary challenges and opportunities for quality and safety in the Aotearoa health and disability system.
Details:
This programme explores the essential components of a high-quality health care harm review and gives participants the opportunity to participate in a simulated harm review as a member of the review team.
Further information and a full schedule is available on our learning from harm education page.
The Commission has released an e-learning course, ‘Co-design in health: an introduction’. Co-design is a tool that brings together consumers, whānau and communities to ensure that multiple perspectives are reflected in the design, delivery and evaluation of services. Access the module on LearnOnline or read more about it here: Health Quality & Safety Commission launches co-design e-learning course.
The Commission is working in partnership with the Te Ngāpara Centre for Restorative Practice Victoria University of Wellington to deliver courses in restorative foundations and responses. Developed using a co-design approach, they are available from Victoria University of Wellington. More information is available on our restorative practice education page.
The e-learning module, Human Factors | Ngā Āhua Tangata in health care includes seven videos and is now available free to all health care professionals via the LearnOnline platform.
Human Factors is the scientific discipline concerned with understanding the interactions between people and other parts of the systems they work within.
It applies theory, principles, data, and methods to design improvements that optimise both human wellbeing and system performance.
The Commission has published links to a range of tools and resources to support staff to improve the quality and safety of care for consumers.
Read more on our quality improvement tools and resources page.
This programme provides foundation-level quality improvement knowledge and skills for everybody participating in health and disability service improvement, consumers and the workforce. This ‘introduction’ is to help everyone in the sector to understand the importance of improving quality and safety in health care. Improving together in an Aotearoa New Zealand context means understanding our responsibilities as Te Tiriti partners to ensure equity of health outcomes and the impact our history of colonisation has on the health and wellbeing of Māori.
Details:
This programme provides participants with a basic knowledge of quality improvement and safety science, and an understanding of simple quality and safety tools.
Details:
The programme develops and expands on the improvement skills and knowledge required to become an effective facilitator of change in the participants’ area of work.
Details:
Applications for the Facilitators programme are currently closed. For more information or to register your interest in the next intake, please email learning.capability@hqsc.govt.nz.
This programme develops and expands on the improvement skills and knowledge required to become an effective facilitator of change. The curriculum is designed for health care professionals who have a major portion of their work focused on change, improvement and/or innovation.
Details:
Applications for the Advisors programme are currently closed. For more information or to register your interest in the next intake, please email learning.capability@hqsc.govt.nz.
An opportunity for health leaders to explore contemporary challenges and opportunities for quality and safety in the Aotearoa health and disability system.
Details:
This programme explores the essential components of a high-quality health care harm review and gives participants the opportunity to participate in a simulated harm review as a member of the review team.
Further information and a full schedule is available on our learning from harm education page.
The Commission has released an e-learning course, ‘Co-design in health: an introduction’. Co-design is a tool that brings together consumers, whānau and communities to ensure that multiple perspectives are reflected in the design, delivery and evaluation of services. Access the module on LearnOnline or read more about it here: Health Quality & Safety Commission launches co-design e-learning course.
The Commission is working in partnership with the Te Ngāpara Centre for Restorative Practice Victoria University of Wellington to deliver courses in restorative foundations and responses. Developed using a co-design approach, they are available from Victoria University of Wellington. More information is available on our restorative practice education page.
The e-learning module, Human Factors | Ngā Āhua Tangata in health care includes seven videos and is now available free to all health care professionals via the LearnOnline platform.
Human Factors is the scientific discipline concerned with understanding the interactions between people and other parts of the systems they work within.
It applies theory, principles, data, and methods to design improvements that optimise both human wellbeing and system performance.
The Commission has published links to a range of tools and resources to support staff to improve the quality and safety of care for consumers.
Read more on our quality improvement tools and resources page.