The National Reporting & Learning System (NRLS) Patient Safety Summit
IGHI's Centre for Health Policy host event on the progress of the NRLS Development Programme.
Patient safety experts gathered at the Royal Society of Arts last week at a summit hosted by IGHI’s Centre for Health Policy to hear about the progress of the National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) Development Programme. The NRLS, which was set up in 2003, is a central database of patient safety incident reports and the aim of the summit was to establish a common understanding of the strengths and limitations of the NRLS and generate new and innovative ideas for the future of incident reporting in patient safety.
Awareness about the true cost of medical errors leading to adverse events was raised in the 1990’s, when clear evidence suggested that large numbers of patients were being harmed by preventable and avoidable medical errors. Reporting and learning from errors is a key strategy for preventing and reducing the incidence of such and this is well established in high-risk industries such as aviation and nuclear power. Acknowledging this approach, the Chief Medical Officer published An Organisation with a Memory in 2000; establishing the National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) and the National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS).
In June 2012, the key functions and expertise for patient safety developed by the NPSA – including the NRLS – transferred to NHS England. This was to ensure that patient safety remains at the heart of the NHS agenda and builds on the learning and expertise developed by the NPSA. NHS England commissioned Imperial’s Centre for Health Policy to deliver a two-year development programme to improve the NRLS and its impact on reducing harm. This is to ensure it is able to meet the needs of a changing NHS and continues to build the evidence, knowledge and information to improve the safety of patient care.
Watch the highlights video below for further information and to hear from the speakers.
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