Healthcare is not without risk. Despite two decades of policy focus and improvement efforts, the global incidence of harm remains stubbornly persistent
Healthcare is not without risk. Despite two decades of policy focus and improvement efforts, the global incidence of harm remains stubbornly persistent
An introductory curriculum to a restorative approach (RA) and its application to healthcare harm was developed.
Long Term Care (LTC) facilities have been the focus of much scrutiny over the last decade, which has intensified with the advent of COVID-19.
The presentation by Professor Jennifer Llewellyn describes how a restorative approach to healthcare can transform systems and service delivery and create a shift in values and thinking
According to a 2019 report from the Canadian Patient Safety Institute, Canada was already facing a public health crisis prior to the pandemic: a crisis of patient safety.
Even though the rate of COVID-19 case numbers have started to ease in hospitals across the country, the workload and stress facing health-care workers hasn’t abated.
The Ministry of Health has published an evaluation of a restorative process designed to listen, understand, and address the harms New Zealanders suffered as result of surgical mesh.
In most countries, litigation is the go-to system adopted for seeking compensation for those who have suffered from the acts and omissions of medical practitioners.
Restorative justice is a methodology that believes that through people sharing, speaking, and also being heard, that healing can happen
In a restorative process the people affected by a harmful event come together in a safe, supportive environment to talk openly about what has happened, and the impact it has had on their lives