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Importance of Resilience and Continuous Healthcare

Healthcare Business Review

Matjaz Tavca, Project Manager, University Medical Centre Ljubljana
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The importance of providing continuous healthcare is usually understood as a fact and therefore many times neglected when speaking of so-called critical (essential) infrastructure, the resilience and continuity of which has to be ensured, with active involvement of all participants in the process. The COVID-19 pandemic unmasked the fragility of our existing healthcare infrastructure, bringing to light the ease with which systems can buckle under pressure, plunging countless lives into peril.


Recognising this, the European Commission is actively championing the effort given to building up the resilience of critical infrastructure across all vital sectors, spearheading several initiatives under the ‘HORIZON’ programme. This concerted effort sees projects like ‘PRECINCT’, ‘PRAETORIAN’ and ‘SUNRISE’ receiving substantial backing. These initiatives are designed to mitigate the destructive ripple effects that have the potential to compromise a country's critical infrastructure, encapsulating entities ranging from hospitals to pharmacies and extending to manufacturing hubs of essential medicines.


Critical (Essential) infrastructure in healthcare refers to the systems, sources and facilities that are vital for the proper functioning and delivery of healthcare services. Its importance lies in several key areas:


1. Patient Care: Critical infrastructure underpins the provision of quality healthcare services to patients. It includes hospitals, clinics, emergency services, diagnostic centres, and other medical facilities indispensable for the diagnosis, treatment, and recovery of patients. Maintaining a functional and well-kept infrastructure aids in the timely and efficient delivery of healthcare, which is vital for optimal patient outcomes and well-being.


Patient safety, broadly speaking, refers to the measures and initiatives taken to ensure the safety of patients in various healthcare settings. It encompasses efforts to prevent medical errors, injuries, and other adverse events that may transpire during the administration of care.


Some vital dimensions of patient safety include:


Preventing Medical Errors: Proactively averting medical errors, which can have detrimental effects on patients, is possible through stringent adherence to proper protocols, open communication, judicious technology utilisation, and effective training of healthcare providers. Strategies like medication reconciliation, barcode scanning, double-checking procedures, and comprehensive patient information systems are pivotal in mitigating errors.              


Infection Control: The threat of healthcare-associated infections to patient safety is substantial. It necessitates the meticulous observance of hand hygiene standards, sterilisation of instruments, adherence to infection control guidelines, and the operation of surveillance programs to curb the proliferation of infections.         


Maintaining a functional and well-kept infrastructure aids in the timely and efficient delivery of healthcare, which is vital for optimal patient outcomes and well-being.

 


Communication and Teamwork: The safeguarding of patient safety hinges significantly on robust communication and teamwork among healthcare personnel, including doctors, nurses, and support staff. The proper exchange of information, clear documentation, and team coordination are vital in averting misunderstandings and errors.              


Patient Engagement: Fostering a culture where patients are active participants in their care trajectory enhances safety. Informed consent, patient education on their condition or procedure, involvement in decision-making, and promoting open communication help forestall medical errors and adverse events. Of course, this includes relatives or other caregivers.


Medication Application Safety: Proper medication labelling, storage, administration, and monitoring are key aspects of medication safety. Barcoding systems, computerised physician order entry, and medication reconciliation are implemented to ensure accuracy and prevent errors.


Reporting and Learning Systems: Establishing mechanisms that foster the candid reporting of adverse events, near misses, and close calls is fundamental. Creating a blame-free environment is vital to nurturing transparency and learning from mistakes. These systems help identify risks, implement improvements, and share lessons learned across healthcare organisations.


Quality and Performance Improvement: Steadfast commitment to continuous quality improvement programs is pivotal in honing healthcare services. These programs endeavour to pinpoint areas ripe for enhancement, orchestrate the integration of evidence-based practices, scrutinise performance metrics, and maintain a vigilant eye on safety indicators.


2. Security of Patients, Employees and Visitors: Healthcare providers are handling many processes that involve hazardous materials, drugs, isotopes, gases, data, etc., that can be misused, together with the usual 'open-door' policy, so security in healthcare providers is of paramount importance to protect patients, ensure the privacy of sensitive information, and prevent unauthorised access (physical and technical). Here are some key aspects of security:


Physical Security: To defend the premises, patient records, medicines, equipment, and other valuable assets, healthcare providers must implement stout physical security strategies. These might encompass surveillance systems, access control mechanisms, and secure facilities to house sensitive documentation.


Data Management: As we navigate the digital healthcare epoch, critical infrastructure extends to encompass IT systems, electronic health records, and medical imaging apparatuses. These technologies serve the pivotal roles of storing and managing patient data, ensuring seamless communication amongst healthcare practitioners, and enhancing the accuracy and promptness of diagnostics and therapeutic interventions. A fortified infrastructure for data management is vital to underpin patient safety, streamline healthcare delivery, and foster strides in medical research and innovation. It is imperative to treat patient data with the highest degree of caution, shielding it from unauthorised access or exposure.


Cybersecurity:  With the surge in cyber-attacks, including ransomware and phishing exploits, healthcare providers find themselves increasingly at risk. Implementing stringent cybersecurity measures—encompassing regular software rejuvenations, firewalls, intrusion detection systems, and encryption—is imperative to protect patient data and equipment from cyber threats. Utilising secure channels for data transmission is central to preserving the privacy and confidentiality of sensitive details, calling for the deployment of secure email ecosystems, encrypted messaging platforms, and VPNs for remote connectivity.


Employee Training: Healthcare personnel must receive comprehensive training on security guidelines, data management techniques, and optimal practices to guard patient information. Training should cover risk awareness, adept password management, and the recognition of and response to security incidents.


Incident Response Plans: Well-articulated incident response blueprints are essential to manage security infringements. These should outline lucid steps for pinpointing and containing breaches, alerting affected parties, and fulfilling legal and regulatory mandates, inclusive of notifying national bodies (CERT) about incidents.


Regular Audits and Assessments: Routinely conducting security audits and assessments can help unearth vulnerabilities and pinpoint areas ripe for enhancement, aiding healthcare providers in keeping pace with evolving security best practices and sustaining compliance with pertinent regulations


3. Emergency Response: In the face of crises or disasters, critical infrastructure forms the linchpin of healthcare response, orchestrating swift emergency service mobilisations, temporary healthcare facility erecting, and medical resource coordination to address surging demands. A proficient infrastructure guarantees that emergency response crews can deliver medical assistance swiftly to those in need.         


4. Preventive Care and Population Health: Beyond individual healthcare edifices, critical infrastructure encompasses community health systems, public health agencies, patients’ associations and preventive care initiatives. These elements are devoted to health promotion, disease prevention, and the enhancement of population-wide well-being. Investments in such infrastructures empower communities to curb healthcare expenditures, bridge health disparity gaps, and facilitate universal access to essential healthcare amenities.


5. Resilience and Continuity of Care: As previously emphasised, resilient healthcare infrastructure ensures uninterrupted healthcare service provision, even amidst adversities. This entails the formulation of emergency preparedness blueprints and the erection of infrastructures capable of weathering diverse disruptions, thereby enabling a swift recovery from interruptions with minimal impact on patient care.


6. Financing security and safety: Most public healthcare providers are not provided with financial resources for securing the security and safety of patients, employees and visitors, which represents an additional risk for safety, resilience and continuous healthcare.


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