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Involvement in serious incident investigations: a qualitative documentary analysis of NHS trust policies in England
Involvement in serious incident investigations: a qualitative documentary analysis of NHS trust policies in England
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Involvement in serious incident investigations: a qualitative documentary analysis of NHS trust policies in England
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Involvement in serious incident investigations: a qualitative documentary analysis of NHS trust policies in England
Involvement in serious incident investigations: a qualitative documentary analysis of NHS trust policies in England

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Involvement in serious incident investigations: a qualitative documentary analysis of NHS trust policies in England
Involvement in serious incident investigations: a qualitative documentary analysis of NHS trust policies in England
Journal Article

Involvement in serious incident investigations: a qualitative documentary analysis of NHS trust policies in England

2024
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Overview
Background The considered shift from individual blame and sanctions towards a commitment to system-wide learning from incidents in healthcare has led to increased understanding of both the moral and epistemic importance of involving those affected. It is important to understand whether and how local policy describes and prompts involvement with a view to understanding the policy landscape for serious incident investigations in healthcare. This study aimed to explore the way in which involvement of those affected by serious incidents is represented in incident investigation policy documents across acute and mental health services in the English NHS, and to identify guidance for more effective construction of policy for meaningful involvement. Methods We conducted a documentary analysis of 43 local serious incident investigation policies to explore the way in which involvement in serious incident investigations is represented in policy documents across acute and mental health services in the NHS in England. Results Three headline findings were generated. First, we identified involvement as a concept was conspicuous by its absence in policy documents. Direct reference to support or involvement of those affected by serious incidents was lacking. Even where involvement and support were recognised as important, this was described as a passive process rather than there being moral or epistemic justification for more active contribution to learning. Second, learning from serious incidents was typically described as a high priority but the language used was unclear and ‘learning’ was more often positioned as construction of an arbitrary set of recommendations rather than a participatory process of deconstruction and reconstruction of specific systems and processes. Third, there was an emphasis placed on a just and open culture but paradoxically this was reinforced by expected compliance, positioning investigations as a tool through which action is governed rather than an opportunity to learn from and with the experiences and expertise of those affected. Conclusions More effective representation in policy of the moral and epistemic reasons for stakeholder involvement in serious incident investigations may lead to better understanding of its importance, thus increasing potential for organisational learning and reducing the potential for compounded harm. Moreover, understanding how structural elements of policy documents were central to the way in which the document is framed and received is significant for both local and national policy makers to enable more effective construction of healthcare policy documents to prompt meaningful action.