Healthcare risk management and the hospital, in a well-run organization, share a series of interdependent functions with each other. The hospital knows that its ultimate mission is the delivery of healthcare to its relevant population. Healthcare risk management works to ensure that the health being delivered is of an effective and safe manner.
Given the mission and the goals of the hospital, it is obvious how and when risk management activities should take place. In this regard, it should be at and within every part of the health delivery function any hospital focuses its efforts on. It also helps to assure the timely and efficient and appropriate dedication of scarce resources to areas where they’re most needed and desired. This has the salutary effect of necessitating that a hospital creates a risk management function, staffed by professionals, within its ranks.
Hospitals today can use various software solutions and suites to help it implement and put its risk management function into efficient use. It also helps to make sure that each and every risk management activity revolves around the goal of doing no harm to a patient. Indeed, it helps the hospital to reduce or even eliminate the possibility of hospital-caused injury because it realizes the nature of risk. This is because risk management knows that such risk can be present even in the kind of mop used to clean up an operating room floor, and aligns sound amelioration practices with the goal of correcting problems in their entirety.
Risk management activities in a hospital also seek to ensure a global perspective exists. Also, that individual clinical functions or subsidiary departments are examined with the goal of reducing the possibility of harm to the patients within a clinic or other activity in the hospital. Having such a perspective helps to ensure every function within the hospital aligns its own activities with that of the organization’s health delivery goals. This benefits patients greatly.
Healthcare risk management and the hospital each understand the goals of the other and work to deliver care that is effective, timely and appropriate to benefit a patient. It also seeks to make sure that the correct resources are expended to better serve the mission, especially in a resource-constrained economic environment.
