Transparency throughout the healthcare system could produce safer care, better outcomes, and reduced costs of care, according to a new report from the National Patient Safety Foundation's Lucian Leape Institute.
Transparency throughout the healthcare system could produce safer care, better outcomes, and more trust among involved parties, according to a new report from the National Patient Safety Foundation’s Lucian Leape Institute.
The Shining a Light: Safer Health Care Through Transparency report addresses 4 domains where the open exchange of information is necessary to improve safety and provides more than 3 dozen recommendations for clinicians, healthcare executives, and policy makers. These recommendations address issues such as disclosure of conflicts of interest, shared decision making with patients, and development of core competencies for communicating medical errors and quality measures to various other stakeholders.
“We hope this report will help convince people that transparency is not only the right thing to do, but that it will lead to improved outcomes, fewer errors, more satisfied patients, and reduced costs of care,” Robert M. Wachter, MD, associate chair of the department of medicine at University of California, San Francisco, said in a statement.
Dr Wachter and Gary Kaplan, MD, FACMPE, chief executive officer, Virginia Mason Health System, served as co-chairs for this project. Both are members of the Lucian Leape Institute.
The 4 domains of transparency that the report focused on were:
“Transparency has been largely overlooked as a patient safety tool, in part because it requires a foundation of a safety culture and strong organizational leadership,” Gary Kaplan, MD, FACMPE, chief executive officer, Virginia Mason Health System, said. “The barriers are not necessarily easy to overcome, but we will never truly achieve safe patient care without improvements in transparency in each of the domains we cite.”
"The Barriers Are Real": Antoine Keller, MD, on Geography and Cardiovascular Health
April 18th 2025Health care disparities are often driven by where patients live, explained Antoine Keller, MD, as he discussed the complex, systematic hurdles that influence the health of rural communities.
Read More
Personalized Care Key as Tirzepatide Use Expands Rapidly
April 15th 2025Using commercial insurance claims data and the US launch of tirzepatide as their dividing point, John Ostrominski, MD, Harvard Medical School, and his team studied trends in the use of both glucose-lowering and weight-lowering medications, comparing outcomes between adults with and without type 2 diabetes.
Listen
Empowering Teams Begins With Human Connection: Missy Hopson, PhD
April 16th 2025Missy Hopson, PhD, Ochsner Health, discussed in detail the challenges of strengthening the patient-centered workforce, the power of community reputation for encouraging health care careers, and the influence of empowered workforces on patient outcomes.
Read More