Courage, collaboration, complexity and chemotherapy safety: The view from the sharp end

Esther Green, Rachel White, Karen James, Anthony Fields, Anthony Easty

Abstract


The Canadian oncology community was devastated by the news in August 2006 that a patient had died from an overdose of fluorouracil. Where we once thought our checks and balances ensured patient safety, we now knew they were not enough. Practice immediately began to change around the country. However, the incident report highlighted that there was much we still didn’t know about safety issues in intravenous ambulatory chemotherapy safety in Canada. In response, an interdisciplinary, pan-Canadian team launched an 18-month exploratory study, resulting in a report identifying several safety issues and associated recommendations. This paper summarizes the key insights we have gathered for Canadian oncology nurses in being part of this study: that we need courage to come forward and disclose safety concerns; we should collaborate to come up with safety improvements that work for everyone; and we should strive to simplify our work at the sharp end by reducing complexity upstream and throughout the system.


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