WIHI - A Podcast from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Health & Fitness:Medicine
Date: January 16, 2014
We’ve just come through a holiday season that’s bitter sweet for some — including families that have lost a loved one because of gun violence. Some incidents garner headlines more than others, due to the sheer magnitude of what’s transpired, the ages of the victims, the incredible shock to an otherwise quiet day in a quiet neighborhood, and the tragic consequences. For those in the trenches of working to reduce gun violence day to day — more often in communities and in health care systems all too familiar with gun-related deaths and injuries — every event stands out and has a story behind it.
How can health care organizations, the very ones that often receive the victims through the doors of their EDs, be more effective partners and leaders further upstream? How can gun violence prevention become part of emerging strategies to encompass and focus on better population health? The January 16, 2014, WIHI: Violence Prevention and Community Health is going to highlight some exemplar thinking and initiatives now gaining traction, that everyone can learn from.
Rachel Davis and Kaile Shilling each have their finger on the pulse of multiple efforts and coalitions that are right now taking a comprehensive preventive, public, and population health approach to reducing violence of all sorts. Dr. Thea James is responsible for close to a decade’s worth of pioneering work at Boston Medical Center that’s spread nationally, to help youth adopt better responses to high-risk situations, and to help medical staff deliver “trauma-informed care.” Gilbert Salinas, currently a Kaiser Permanente Safety Net Fellow at IHI, has garnered national attention for his work in Los Angeles, and with former Surgeon General David Satcher on a seminal 2001 “Report on Youth Violence.” Gilbert will also discuss a hospital-based intervention program he’s helped nurture, known as “Caught in the Crossfire.”
WIHI host Madge Kaplan talks with panelists, who offer a lot of great, actionable ideas for preventing and reducing gun violence.
WIHI: The How and Why of Deprescribing
WIHI: Connecting Patient Experience to Strategic Aims
WIHI: How to Build Better Behavioral Health in the Emergency Department
WIHI: Addiction Treatment Demystified: Proven, Practical Steps for Complex Care.
WIHI: Strategic Pathways to Population Health
WIHI: Giving Patients and Families the Tools to be Health Care Improvers
WIHI: How to Make Change Happen: An Introduction to IHI's Psychology of Change Framework
WIHI: Pursuing Health Equity in North Carolina
WIHI: Sustaining and Strengthening Safety Huddles
WIHI: Mobility Matters for Age-Friendly Care
WIHI: Mindfulness and Patient Safety
WIHI - Aging in Place with a Disability and Dignity
WIHI: Practicing More Careful and Thoughtful Diagnosis
WIHI: What's in a Name? Health Care's Chief Quality Officer.
WIHI: Opioid Crisis: Changing Habits and Improving Pain Management
WIHI: Discovering Your Way to Greatness
WIHI: The Careful and Kind Patient Revolution
WIHI: Health Care Innovation and R&D - Taking Stock at Ten Years
WIHI: A New Emergency Checklist for Office-Based Surgery
WIHI: QI Takes on Veteran and Chronic Homelessness
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Good Nurse Bad Nurse
The Relaxback UK Show
On Call With Dr. Anselm Anyoha
The Peter Attia Drive
The Doctor’s Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.