• Title of article

    Disturbing the Doxa of Patient Safety; Comment on “False Dawns and New Horizons in Patient Safety Research and Practice”

  • Author/Authors

    Travaglia ، Joanne - University of Technology Sydney

  • Pages
    3
  • From page
    867
  • To page
    869
  • Abstract
    In a recent edition of this journal, Mannion and Braithwaite provide a succinct analysis of the emergence, and ultimately limited impact, of what they term the current ‘Safety I’ movement in healthcare. They describe the arc of this field from denial, through engagement via mechanisms and approaches imported from other industries, to the current situation where, despite ‘best efforts,’ error rates remain stubbornly recalcitrant. In examining the failure of systemwide efforts to produce sustained reductions in errors and adverse events, that article exposes the doxa, or what Bourdieu calls ‘the taken for granted’ which is central to this latest wave of patient safety movement. In this commentary, I would like to take focus on two key elements of Mannion and Braithwaite’s argument: that harm is caused by misguided but otherwise wellintentioned actions and the ‘embracing’ of patient safety. I then conclude by briefly considering the implications of these for Safety II, particularly as envisaged by the authors as an evolutionary, and therefore linear progression, from Safety I.
  • Keywords
    Sociology of Safety , Sociology of Professions , Bourdieu
  • Journal title
    International Journal of Health Policy and Management
  • Serial Year
    2018
  • Journal title
    International Journal of Health Policy and Management
  • Record number

    2460046