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CoCo-Safety: Complexity of Communication – a Challenge in Patient- and Client Safety´s Profile image

CoCo-Safety: Complexity of Communication – a Challenge in Patient- and Client Safety

Project
01.02.2024 - 30.06.2027
Department of Nursing Science, Faculty of Health Sciences

Funders

Main funder

University of Eastern Finland - Itä-Suomen yliopisto

The University of Eastern Finland funds the PI's Postdoc researcher position

Leaders

Introducing image of the groupCoCo-Safety: Complexity of Communication – a Challenge in Patient- and Client Safety

Figure: Coco-Safety research project

CoCo-Safety research project is a postdoctoral research project consisting of four sub-studies. The purpose is to enhance medication-, patient- and client safety from a communication perspective.

Communication skills are core competencies in nursing. However, communication challenges are among the most common factors contributing to medication incidents. Communication training needs for nurses have also been recognized in the literature.  Research evidence is lacking regarding critical communication challenges relating specifically to serious medication incidents.

Also, language challenges among nursing staff are discussed increasingly in Finland while national statistics show an increase in the migrant workforce in healthcare, posing potential language skill challenges. This may raise the risk for medication safety. Research evidence of language challenges’ contribution to medication incidents is scarce. Also, evidence is needed about the interventions concerning language skills in nursing.

This descriptive postdoc study responds to these research gaps by describing critical risk points in medication communication, language skill challenges and interventions in medication care. The evidence can be used to develop continuous communication training for nurses and managers and intervention development in clinical nursing.

The research group members are from the University of Eastern Finland, Monash University and Deakinin University in Melbourne Australia, and the Helsinki University Hospital in Finland.

 

Cooperation

Keywords