When no news is bad news: communication failures and the hidden assumptions that threaten safety

Communication failures in healthcare can be catastrophic. Lost test results, delayed diagnoses, missing handover information: all can have serious impacts on the safety of care with tragic consequences for patients. Even seemingly trivial mishaps can result in disaster. For example, a young mother d...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Macrae, C
Format: Journal article
Published: SAGE Publications 2017
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author Macrae, C
author_facet Macrae, C
author_sort Macrae, C
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description Communication failures in healthcare can be catastrophic. Lost test results, delayed diagnoses, missing handover information: all can have serious impacts on the safety of care with tragic consequences for patients. Even seemingly trivial mishaps can result in disaster. For example, a young mother died after two referral letters were inadvertently addressed to number 16, rather than number 1b, on the road where she lived, meaning diagnosis and treatment of cancer was significantly delayed. Her ten-year survival at the initial point of referral was estimated as 92%. In another case, a patient died of a major haemorrhage during surgery after pre-prepared, cross-matched blood had been incorrectly sent back to the blood bank due a single character in the patient’s name being misspelled. These cases, and many others, point to one of the most insidious risks associated with communication in healthcare: many communicative processes are still commonly viewed as rather mundane administrative tasks – instead of safety-critical processes that are essential to safe care.
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spelling oxford-uuid:7f3a91db-3152-4b83-a8ba-78aa502360d22022-03-26T21:15:29ZWhen no news is bad news: communication failures and the hidden assumptions that threaten safetyJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7f3a91db-3152-4b83-a8ba-78aa502360d2Symplectic Elements at OxfordSAGE Publications2017Macrae, CCommunication failures in healthcare can be catastrophic. Lost test results, delayed diagnoses, missing handover information: all can have serious impacts on the safety of care with tragic consequences for patients. Even seemingly trivial mishaps can result in disaster. For example, a young mother died after two referral letters were inadvertently addressed to number 16, rather than number 1b, on the road where she lived, meaning diagnosis and treatment of cancer was significantly delayed. Her ten-year survival at the initial point of referral was estimated as 92%. In another case, a patient died of a major haemorrhage during surgery after pre-prepared, cross-matched blood had been incorrectly sent back to the blood bank due a single character in the patient’s name being misspelled. These cases, and many others, point to one of the most insidious risks associated with communication in healthcare: many communicative processes are still commonly viewed as rather mundane administrative tasks – instead of safety-critical processes that are essential to safe care.
spellingShingle Macrae, C
When no news is bad news: communication failures and the hidden assumptions that threaten safety
title When no news is bad news: communication failures and the hidden assumptions that threaten safety
title_full When no news is bad news: communication failures and the hidden assumptions that threaten safety
title_fullStr When no news is bad news: communication failures and the hidden assumptions that threaten safety
title_full_unstemmed When no news is bad news: communication failures and the hidden assumptions that threaten safety
title_short When no news is bad news: communication failures and the hidden assumptions that threaten safety
title_sort when no news is bad news communication failures and the hidden assumptions that threaten safety
work_keys_str_mv AT macraec whennonewsisbadnewscommunicationfailuresandthehiddenassumptionsthatthreatensafety