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Fixing healthcare's workforce problems

Fixing healthcare's workforce problems

FromThe BMJ Podcast


Fixing healthcare's workforce problems

FromThe BMJ Podcast

ratings:
Length:
37 minutes
Released:
Apr 26, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Where next for psychological safety? Amy Edmundson is professor of Leadership and Management at the Harvard Business School. Her work on psychological safety has underpinned so much quality improvement, and she joins us fresh of the state at the International Forum on Quality and safety in healthcare to talk about the next steps in creating a safe work place.
The BMJ has published two new investigations, looking at alcohol and tobacco industry funding of public health and education - we’ll hear how the companies who create the problems, are now styling themselves as the solution to their own ills. Rebecca Coombes joins us to explain what The BMJ has found, and May van Schalkwyk, a researcher from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, explains how commercial conflicts are shaping the wrong education tactics.
And finally, our NHS commissioners have more recommendations - this time on workforce issues. Mary Dixon-Woods, director of THIS institute at the Unversity of Cambridge, and Matt Morgan, intensive care consultant in Cardiff, tell the NHS to get serious about staffing.

02:03 Amy Edmondson on Future Health and Psychological Safety
10:24 The Impact of Corporate Funding on Public Health
19:57 Addressing NHS Workforce Challenges: Insights and Solutions


Reading list;
Our new podcast - Future Health
International forum keynote -  "Learning to fail" with Amy Edmundson and Don Berwick
Investigation - Medscape caves in on courses funded by tobacco giant Philip Morris, while medics fear global push into medical education
Investigation - Big alcohol: Universities and schools urged to throw out industry-funded public health advice
Commission on the future of the NHS - The future of the NHS depends on its workforce
 
 
Released:
Apr 26, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The BMJ is an international peer reviewed medical journal and a fully “online first” publication. The BMJ’s vision is to be the world’s most influential and widely read medical journal. Our mission is to lead the debate on health and to engage, inform, and stimulate doctors, researchers, and other health professionals in ways that will improve outcomes for patients. We aim to help doctors to make better decisions.