The critics of the health app are speaking up in a safe space, it is safe for them to do so as there isn’t any apparent threat?
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Indeed. In fact, one might argue the only threat clinicians face in that scenario is from the health app itself...
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Isn’t this the case in pretty much every walk of life? As an employee you can safely criticise just about anything except your own employer?
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True. Or criticise your industry as a whole, (if you make your feelings known widely enough), as I found out. Still, I figured a career change was preferable to complicit silence. Can be an expensive choice though. Moral bankruptcy vs financial bankruptcy? Decisions, decisions...
End of conversation
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I understand all need to be able to speak out, feel safe doing so. I think safe spaces would only work when accompanied by, open and transparent. Historically, it's been absent for many families. So if I'd been given full truth, would have sat in any space I needed to.
#midstaffs -
I think it would be variable. Until there is accountability, responsibility for when this doesn't happen. What is allowed will continue. That's not blame, scapegoating. To err is human, to deny, defend, delay is a choice. Families don't have a choice. Inner peace relies on truth
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But we’d never know, because it’s a safe space and taking info out of it is prohibited.
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Any ‘safe space’ has to be inclusive of patients and/or families or it won’t work. My perceived safety threat has never been from patients & families, it has been from senior healthcare professionals & person-centred, name, blame & shame centred incident investigations.
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Even with patient/family involvement it’s not a fair playing field. The trust holds the records, knowledge, access to legal advice, access to future treatment. The patient ..?
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Those issues certainly need dealing with, nurturing a safe, open culture will help. Re legal costs, most certainly not a level playing field, heavily weighted against most patients & families.
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It's not just the costs that make the legal playing field uneven, (as if that weren't enough), but as Kate points out, the records are key. Trusts legal team has access to everything (including the truth). Patient's legal team (??) get what they're given. Weeding/Seeding rules.
End of conversation
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