Safer Together: A National Action Plan to Advance Patient Safety

Safer Together: A National Action Plan to Advance Patient Safety illuminates the collective insights of the 27 member organizations of the National Steering Committee for Patient Safety (NSC), convened in 2018 by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement and committed to achieving safer care and reducing harm to patients and caregivers.

Though U.S. researchers have identified many evidence-based, effective best practices for harm reduction over the past 20 years, they are seldom shared nationally and implemented effectively across multiple organizations. Reducing preventable harm requires a total systems approach: a coordinated, proactive strategy in which risks are anticipated and systemwide safety processes are applied across the entire healthcare continuum through robust collaboration among all stakeholders.

The National Action Plan includes 17 recommendations to advance patient safety, with a focus on eliminating inequities at the point of care. Supplemented by both a Self-Assessment Tool and an Implementation Resource Guide, the Plan centers on four foundational and interdependent priority areas:

The NSC considers these areas to be foundational because they create the fertile soil that allows broader safety initiatives to take root and be cultivated. They are also interdependent because advancing in one area alone is difficult without advancing in all of them. And they each benefit from widespread collaboration and coordination. The resulting recommendations in these four areas build on the substantial body of experience, evidence, and lessons learned that the NSC has gathered and will test and implement together to allow for future refinements as our understanding, experience, and evidence evolve over time.

The NSC is co-chaired by Jeffrey Brady, M.D., M.P.H., former director of AHRQ's Center for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety, and Tejal K. Gandhi, M.D., M.P.H., CPPS, Senior Fellow, Institute for Healthcare Improvement; Chief Safety and Transformation Officer, Press Ganey Associates.

Blog Post

Read the AHRQ Views blog post by Dr. Jeff Brady, former director of AHRQ's Center for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety, and Dr. Tejal K. Ghandi, Senior Fellow at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement.