组织学习- covid -19经验:改善危机应对中患者护理的创新全球实践

James A. Muskopf, N. Sudan, E. Verdooner, M. Nair
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引用次数: 3

摘要

:在整个人类历史上,各种文明以越来越复杂、系统的方法应对灾难和疾病爆发,以此作为组织混乱和保护人类生命的手段。SARS-CoV-2冠状病毒(新冠肺炎)大流行提供了一个独特的机会,可以学习世界各地医院和紧急护理环境中的灾难管理实践和危机驱动的患者护理流程变化。新冠肺炎是流程变化和系统重新设计需求的加速剂,在这些系统中,经典的线性评估方法通常为精心实施的服务改进提供信息。引人注目的是,许多创新方法和宝贵的经验教训来自全球各地,而这些地方的技术和资源获取最为有限。这篇文章回答了这样一个问题,即我们可以从过去一百多年来通过帮助专业人员和决策者进行的灾害管理的演变以及今天看到的最佳实践中了解到如何应对未来的灾害?宏观从业者在几个全球社区共同创造了独特的方法,以帮助应对新冠肺炎和其他灾害,尽管资源有限,需求似乎无限。作者参考了意大利、尼日利亚、南非、韩国和美国在新冠肺炎期间对患者护理反应的现有案例研究,记录了当地患者护理系统中各种技术的创新实践和使用。文章最后提出了设计更稳健、适应性更强和危机应对措施的最佳实践,以及使用发展评估作为评估和改进患者服务的敏捷方法。它还提出了帮助专业人员在翻译疾病控制中心、世界卫生组织、非政府组织和选定智库等组织的灾害管理大数据系统方面可以发挥的作用。
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Organizational learning—COVID-19 experience: innovative global practices for improving patient care in crisis response
: Across human history, civilizations have responded to disasters and outbreaks of disease with increasingly complex, systematic approaches as a means of organizing chaos and protecting human life. The SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic provides a unique opportunity to learn from the practice of disaster management and crisis-driven changes to patient care processes in hospital and emergent care environments worldwide. COVID-19 acts as an accelerant for process change and the need for redesign in systems where classical, linear evaluation methods most often inform carefully implemented service improvements. Strikingly, many innovative approaches and valuable lessons come from all over the globe where technology and access to resources have been most limited. This article answers the question, what can we learn about how to respond to future disasters from the evolution of disaster management as performed by helping professionals and policymakers during the past hundred-plus years and best practices seen today? Macro practitioners have co-created unique approaches within several global communities to help cope with COVID-19 and other disasters despite limited resources and seemingly unlimited needs. Referencing existing case studies of patient care responses during COVID-19 in Italy, Nigeria, South Africa, South Korea, and the United States, the authors document innovative practices and use of diverse technologies in local patient care systems. The article concludes by suggesting best practices for designing more robust, adaptive, and crisis ready responses to patient care, as well as the use of developmental evaluation as an agile approach to evaluating and improving patient services. It also suggests roles that helping professionals can play in the translation of big data systems of disaster management from organizations such as the Center for Disease Control, World Health Organization, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and selected think tanks, among others.
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