Mainstreaming quality and safety: a reformulation of quality and safety education for health professions students

BMJ Qual Saf. 2011 Apr;20 Suppl 1(Suppl_1):i79-82. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs.2010.046516.

Abstract

The urgent need to expand the ability of health professionals to improve the quality and safety of patient care in the USA has been well documented. Yet the current methods of teaching quality and safety to health professionals are inadequate for the task. To the extent that quality and safety are addressed at all, they are taught using pedagogies with a narrow focus on content transmission, didactic sessions that are spatially and temporally distant from clinical work, and quality and safety projects segregated from the provision of actual patient care. In this article an argument for a transformative reorientation in quality and safety education for health professions is made. This transformation will require new pedagogies in which a) quality improvement is an integral part of all clinical encounters, b) health professions students and their clinical teachers become co-learners working together to improve patient outcomes and systems of care, c) improvement work is envisioned as the interdependent collaboration of a set of professionals with different backgrounds and perspectives skillfully optimising their work processes for the benefit of patients, and d) assessment in health professions education focuses on not just individual performance but also how the care team's patients fared and how the systems of care were improved.

MeSH terms

  • Health Personnel / education*
  • Humans
  • Inservice Training / organization & administration*
  • Quality Assurance, Health Care*
  • Safety Management*
  • United States