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Displaying 31 - 40 of 44 results
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Patient Safety Week 2018 screensavers
Screensaver versions of the Patient Safety Week posters.
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Patient Safety Week 2018 poster: Germ hotspots
This Patient Safety Week poster encourages clinicians to follow the 5 moments for hand hygiene to prevent the spread of germs.
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Patient Safety Week 2019 evaluation
Patient Safety Week was an awareness-raising week held on 3–9 November 2019.
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Patient Safety Week 2018 poster: Are you giving germs a hand?
This Patient Safety Week poster shows consumers the types of germs that can be carried on your hands, and that the easiest way to prevent the spread of germs is to wash your hands correctly.
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Speaking up for patient safety
This video talks about the importance of speaking up for patient safety – being vocal is necessary because many times, patients can't speak for themselves.
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Patient Safety Week update – 24 July 2019
Planning for Patient Safety Week 2019 is well underway. Our main resource, training and education videos focusing on implicit bias in health care, are being filmed and feature a range of subject-matter experts.
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Blog: The voice of whānau: communication is the most important thing
In 1997 Courtenay’s five-month-old daughter contracted pneumococcal meningitis and ever since has lived with cerebral palsy, epilepsy, hydrocephalus, spastic quadriplegia and scoliosis. In 2012 Courtenay’s two-year-old son was diagnosed with autism.
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Who me – biased? He ngākau haukume tōku?
Health professionals are encouraged to watch new learning modules on understanding bias in health care, released today for Patient Safety Week.
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Patient Safety Week
Planning for Patient Safety Week | Wiki Haumaru Tūroro (3–9 November 2019) continues. This year we are again partnering with ACC to promote the week. This year’s theme is ‘Improving communication by understanding implicit bias in health care’.
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Blog: Bias in health care can lead to poor outcomes
Wiki Haumaru Tūroro | Patient Safety Week 2019 focuses on understanding bias in health care. In this blog, Josie* shares her story, including the unconscious bias she has faced as the mother of a son with an intellectual disability.