Recognising Risk and Improving Patient Safety - Mildred's Story

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • Patient Safety - Mildred's Story
    Mildred's Story was produced to form part of a 'Recognising Risk and Improving Patient Safety' course. The course takes a novel approach to educating healthcare professionals about the importance of non-clinical skills, behaviour and attitudes in assuring patient safety.
    It draws upon the experiences of patients within healthcare settings, and knowledge gained from other high-risk industries, to develop a strategy enabling healthcare workers to critically appraise and intervene in the development of patient risk.
    Mildred's Story has been reconstructed from the actual experiences of a number of patients.
    Part One
    (Mildred's Flat) Introductory/Exemplary Care
    Part Two
    (A & E Department) Situational Awareness
    Part Three
    (Care of the Elderly Ward) Communication
    Part Four
    (Outside Theatre) Leadership
    Part Five
    (Recovery Room) Empowerment
    Part Six
    (Orthopaedic Ward) Empowerment
    The film was produced with financial assistance from the National Patient Safety Agency. It was directed and filmed by University of Leicester ITS-Multimedia Services and written by Paul Allsop, Steve Overton, Nicole Stewart and Paul Stewart.

Комментарии • 20

  • @victoriaalicewestwood3558
    @victoriaalicewestwood3558 11 лет назад +3

    Amazing. In my hospital all suspected strokes come in a blue light ambulance and the standby phone rings well before they arrive!

  • @katcankan7129
    @katcankan7129 6 лет назад

    Lost for words. However this did explain a practice that l saw and would have to address first when working in London as a nurse. I won't go into how the patient came to us from recovery (not the correct way). Their pain relief had always ran out... now l have an explanation why. Thank you.

  • @TARDIS9
    @TARDIS9 8 лет назад +5

    This is the sort of film that needs to be shown to hospitals, nationwide. BTW, what did happen to Mildred? I find the cliffhanger you guys left it on not very satisfactory to the plot (I'm a media student).

    • @Adam657
      @Adam657 5 лет назад

      What happens to Mildred depends on you. They usually show this on a clinical skills day or patient safety day. Right when it ends you get called to a pretend ‘crash’ with a simulated robot patient (Mildred) and you have to do CPR, secure her airway and treat the anaphylaxis with epi from the drugs trolley. If you don’t do well enough she dies.

  • @sevvyboi
    @sevvyboi 6 лет назад +6

    Why does the guy have a saucepan on his head @ 10:10

  • @rachelbuchan5407
    @rachelbuchan5407 10 лет назад +7

    Don't understand why 999 wouldn't be called!

  • @Midgethemouse1
    @Midgethemouse1 11 лет назад +6

    Why would the warden call the GP and not an ambulance???

  • @kansasnew4738
    @kansasnew4738 2 месяца назад

    Very good acting reminds me of coronation street really

  • @charlescarpeaux8453
    @charlescarpeaux8453 8 лет назад +2

    This patient would have had a CT of the head right away and a Stroke Code would have been implemented. TPA would have been on standby.

  • @sandeepkaur7863
    @sandeepkaur7863 7 лет назад +2

    I am going to be a registered nurse soon and this video making me mad .. How could the experienced people not take immediate actions for stroke . the video is full of errors . I am not a native English speaker . But I have this in my mind I cannot miss any information that could directly or indirectly affect the patient especially when it comes to communicating with health team members and family of the client .

  • @rachelbuchan5407
    @rachelbuchan5407 10 лет назад +5

    Now I understand. Teaching video about how not to do things.

  • @litamahdi6434
    @litamahdi6434 5 лет назад

    i think this is an example we dont work without regulation or standard proccedure

  • @larinemeade
    @larinemeade 7 лет назад +1

    911 Should have been called!

  • @charlescarpeaux8453
    @charlescarpeaux8453 8 лет назад +2

    Over worked or apathy. Both lead to many mistakes.

  • @MoByGh
    @MoByGh 11 лет назад

    5:27 EPIC

    • @Adam657
      @Adam657 5 лет назад

      That section is on ‘situational awareness’ so it’s a little joke they put in to see if the viewer notices, most don’t.

  • @helenhunt3579
    @helenhunt3579 9 лет назад +1

    Absolutely shocking,very poor practice and communication skills,no wonder the nhs is such a mess

    • @kansasnew4738
      @kansasnew4738 2 месяца назад

      it isn't real they are actors doing a skit for television probably they are amazing actors though.