Reimagining LTC BC Collaborative: Appropriate Use of Antipsychotics | Webinar 5: Celebrate and Share
Online (Zoom)This is a supplemental webinar in addition to the coaching calls.
This is a supplemental webinar in addition to the coaching calls.
Join us to learn about how an inter-professional team optimized the quality of care through improved engagement, outcomes and patient experience by applying the principles of team coordination, communication and patient center care for long-term patients in the ICU.
Measurement and the effective use of data are cornerstones of any improvement effort, from incremental changes to radical transformations, but it can be difficult to know where to begin. The workshop will explore how data can be used to drive the improvements we wish to see – setting up measurement systems that work, analyzing data to uncover new insights and monitoring improvements over time.
The capability to lead improvement is vital to advancing quality in the health care system. This workshop introduces health care professionals to foundational quality improvement principles and practices required to lead, implement, and sustain quality initiatives within their organization.
Improving the quality of care for delirium in the ICU setting involves implementing strategies to prevent, identify, and manage delirium. Join us to hear about the lessons learned from a nurse-led quality improvement initiative at Abbotsford ICU. In this session, learn how you can drive significant practice change using quality improvement methodology.
This interactive skill-building workshop will focus on human factors principles and safety approaches including heuristic analysis, task analysis, usability testing, and the hierarchy of effectiveness. Participants will learn how to apply human factors principles and tools that can be used to help make healthcare safer to deliver quality patient care.
The capability to lead improvement is vital to advancing quality in the health care system. This workshop introduces health care professionals to foundational quality improvement principles and practices required to lead, implement, and sustain quality initiatives within their organization.
The Adult Guardianship Act provides additional and valuable legislation to support and protect vulnerable adults. In 2022, Interior Health aimed to support 12 Mental Health and Substance Use team leads to increase competency in completing adult guardianship investigations. Join us to learn how they used QI tools for this improvement project including a positive deviance approach for engaging clinicians. Hear about the strategies and steps the team has taken to sustain the progress made during this initiative.
This webinar will focus on supporting OAT Prescribers in the Primary Care setting. This webinar will be following the session hosted by the BC Centre on Substance Use (BCCSU) for Nurses with Certified Practice in Opioid Use Disorder Care (RN-CP OUD), but we welcome all prescribers or those looking to begin prescribing to this webinar. Most of the webinar time will be dedicated to a question-and-answer period with an expert panel.
This webinar will focus on supporting Primary Care team members in the care of people with substance use disorders. It is designed for team members who are non-prescribers and looking to increase their knowledge about opioid use disorder, available treatments, and effective harm reduction strategies. The session will focus on the current state of the toxic drug crisis in BC and how it is influencing communities across the province.
Bringing together BC’s health care community to share and discuss how to improve quality across the continuum of care.
This information is collected by Health Quality BC under section 26(c) of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and will be used to email you our newsletter. If you have any questions about the collection of this information, please contact: info@healthqualitybc.ca or 604.668.8210.
We would like to acknowledge that we are living and working with humility and respect on the traditional territories of the First Nations peoples of British Columbia.
We specifically acknowledge and express our gratitude to the keepers of the lands of the ancestral and unceded territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and səl̓ilwətaɁɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations, where our main office is located.
We also recognize Métis people and Métis Chartered Communities, as well as the Inuit and urban Indigenous peoples living across the province on various traditional territories.