scholarly journals Evaluating the use of narrative pedagogy in person-centred care and human factors in perioperative practice education

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Joanna Holland ◽  
◽  
Nita Muir ◽  

Background: There is an international effort to develop understanding from human factors theory and implement this in healthcare to improve person-centred care and patient safety. Aim: This project aimed to evaluate the use of narrative pedagogy to teach human factors to perioperative personnel in the workplace. Methods: Using the action research model, an interactive learning session based on lessons from serious incidents was developed and delivered to perioperative staff in an NHS Trust within a practice development programme. Data were collected in the form of questionnaires and peer reviews to evaluate the learning session, and thematically analysed. Findings: The use of narrative pedagogy to explore human factors theory empowered participants to speak up, and this influenced the workplace safety culture. Conclusion: Narrative pedagogy reconnects healthcare employees with compassionate approaches to person-centred care, and this provides powerful motivation to improve the safety culture. Further studies should focus on different applications of narrative pedagogy in workplace learning, and creative approaches to teaching human factors. Implications for practice: • Narrative pedagogy can be a conduit to develop person-centred practice • Engaging staff through interactive practice development sessions can encourage expansive learning about human factors and their application in practice • Narrative pedagogy motivates healthcare staff to improve the safety culture in practice

2021 ◽  
pp. 237-250
Author(s):  
Rishi Diwan ◽  
Yusuf Faizan ◽  
Sandesh Mishra

Author(s):  
Geoff Trickey

The author discusses whether the impressive progress achieved by technical advances in project management have been stalled by failure to make similar advances in addressing the Human Factors. This imbalance may, he believes, be contributing to challenges being widely experienced in dealing with a residual ‘rump' of workplace safety incidents, for example. He argues that ever tightening the controls and micro-managing workplace behaviour or pursuing zero safety incidents can be counterproductive both for compliance and for the bottom line. Professional, regulatory and standards bodies increasingly emphasise the importance of employee participation and risk leadership in achieving the mutual trust and respect necessary for objectives to be fully realised. He advises that project managers need to appreciate distinctive and deeply rooted individual differences in the behavioural dispositions of individual employees and proposes that readily available assessment techniques that address these issues should be added to their toolkit.


2008 ◽  
Vol 84 (4) ◽  
pp. 539-542
Author(s):  
Jeremy Rickards

Human Factors Engineering is an interdisciplinary science concerned with the effect of work on the human body and its relationship to the workplace. Since the 1970s, UNB – Forest Engineering has been a major contributor to teaching and research in this discipline, and in its application to forest operations. Rapid advances in mechanized tree-harvesting systems resulted in significant new workplace issues for operator health, safety, and machine design. Researchers responded by creating a CSA standard, working cooperatively with FERIC, CPPA and more recently the CWF, and founding the International Journal of Forest Engineering, which is a unique source for research results and developments in this discipline. Future research will involve multi-national teams of Human Factors Engineers, supported by related disciplines in healthcare and engineering. Key words: human factors, forest engineering, workplace health, workplace safety, mechanized forest operations


2014 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 22-24

Purpose – This paper aims to describe the various ways in which UK materials-handling service provider Briggs Equipment is seeking to eliminate foreseeable accidents in the workplace. Design/methodology/approach – Explains the initiatives that the company has taken among its own employees, plus one it has run for home-improvement center and material-handling partner Homebase. Reveals why Briggs decided to sponsor the Forklift Truck Association’s most recent safety conference. Findings – Details the importance of ensuring that all forklift-truck operators are fully trained to use the equipment and are aware of the company’s latest health and safety procedures; making certain that temporary workers have been given a thorough induction and have been fully trained to use the equipment and are aware of the site’s health and safety procedures; using the most appropriate of the technology available to make forklift trucks safer; and putting in place an anonymous, easy-to-report method to help workers to speak up about accidents or hazards in the workplace. Practical implications – Explains that Briggs aims to achieve a new organizational culture that places the emphasis on safety, but accepts that this cannot be created overnight. Social implications – Reveals that the latest Health and Safety Executive figures reveal a 4 per cent rise in serious accidents involving forklift trucks – the first rise in two years, which may result from some businesses cutting corners to reduce costs. Originality/value – Details the numerous and wide-ranging initiatives that one company is taking to improve workplace safety.


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