Towards an exnovative turn in patient safety research
Groups related to this event
Centre for Healthcare Resilience and Implementation Science
Centre for Health Systems and Safety Research
Event date
Monday, 18 July 2016
Associate Professor Jessica Mesman from Maastricht University in the Netherlands. View the seminar video.
Abstract
In this presentation Jessica Mesman will take the opportunity to discuss her efforts to make a difference in practices related to patient safety. She will reflect critically on the dominant understanding of patient safety. According to her the improvement of patient safety should not only be based on error-reducing activities, but also on a sophisticated understanding of the vigor of health care practices. The exploration of latent resources can be considered as a form of exnovation. This approach can be characterized as ‘innovation from within’. In her presentation she will outline an alternative research agenda: one that has its focus on the presence of safety and on the competencies of frontline clinicians to preserve adequate levels of safety within real-life complexities.
Speaker profile
Jessica Mesman is Associate Professor in the field of Science and Technology Studies at Maastricht University in the Netherlands. Her current research interests include the anthropology of epistemic cultures in medicine, the method of exnovative ethnography and video-reflexivity, as well as the development of a positive approach to patient safety. In order to develop her arguments in these areas she studies informal and unarticulated dimensions of establishing and preserving safety in health care practices.
Seminar details
Date: Monday 18th July 2016
Time: 1pm - 2pm
Venue: Interactive Zone, Ground Floor, Building F10A, Macquarie University Clinic Building, 2 Technology Place, Macquarie University
Chairperson: Professor Jeffrey Braithwaite
To register for this seminar please click here
Content owner: Australian Institute of Health Innovation Last updated: 11 Mar 2024 6:22pm