A Review of our Virtual Conference

It was with the remarkable Italian renaissance city of Florence in mind, that the International Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua) bestowed the title “Emotion, inspiration and creativity – pathways to global health quality” on our 37th international conference. 

It was with the remarkable Italian renaissance city of Florence in mind, that The International Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua) bestowed the title “Emotion, inspiration and creativity – pathways to global health quality” on our 37th international conference. We intended that with our delegates coming together in a place so steeped in history, art and culture that our professional interactions and deliberations would be uplifted; inspiring fresh commitment to the pursuit of improved safety for patients and the quality of care worldwide.  

We never made it in person to Florence: the pandemic intervened. However, I am confident that we reached new heights of sharing and understanding at our virtual conference. More than 1,050 delegates from 83 countries attended, presenting plenary addresses, sessions, keynote talks and displaying e-posters. We all spent many informative hours participating in forums and discussions. Even as a virtual event, many of us met new colleagues, built on our existing networks, and bolstered longstanding relationships.

Quite simply, we caught up with friends, ISQua Members, Academicians, Experts, Fellows, and stakeholders after more than 18 months of some of the most challenging times of our working lives. There were lots to talk about, absorb, and learn.

Italians know about these challenges as much as anyone across the world. In the early weeks of the pandemic, they were in the epicentre of it. Throughout the conference, we were greatly motivated by the examples of sheer persistence and courage that the whole Italian health system set for the world.

Across the ‘floor’ of the virtual conference, we benefitted from new insights, research, discussion, and persuasive ideas from colleagues. Together we explored ways to better implement pathways and strategies to improve patient safety globally.

Our conference opened with Professor Francesco Venneri from the Italian Network for Safety in Healthcare (INSH) and Mr Dario Nardella, Mayor of Florence. Both offered not only warm words of welcome but also understanding and empathy for the challenging times faced by all delegates.

We celebrated the recipient of this year’s Health Assessment Lab / Medical Outcomes Trust John E Ware, Jr and Alvin Tarlov Career Achievement Prize in Patient-Reported Outcomes Measures. Our congratulations go to Professor Melanie Calvert, Professor of Outcomes Methodology, University of Birmingham, UK. We are encouraged by all you do to enhance care for patients.  

The Peter Reizenstein Award for Best Paper Published in the International Journal for Quality in Health Care (IJQHC) in 2020 was awarded after a rigorous nomination and voting process for the paper “The 40 Health Systems, COVID-19 (40HS, C-19) study”. Along with my co-authors, Dr Yvonne Tran, Professor Johanna Westbrook, and Dr Louise Ellis from the Australian Institute of Health Innovation, I was honoured to accept the award and I wish to complement the consistently high standard of academic research published in IJQHC.

After the inspiring scene-setting from our Italian hosts, we learned a great deal from the many informative and erudite plenary sessions. The range and depth of accompanying presentations, talks and workshops was impressive. Knowing full well I cannot hope to do justice to everyone who presented and that each participant followed his or her own learning journey and hence had their own unique experience, I hope to capture a flavour of the pathway I moved through, in what follows.

Professor Walter Ricciardi from Italy roused us all with his discussion on the role of leadership to tackle the ‘perfect storm’ of health system challenges: ageing populations, global migration patterns, chronic ill-health, and economic constraints. All of us would have recognized our own version of these challenges our own country, health system, and in the global context as we listened to this compelling address.

Dr Ron Wyatt, US, and Ms Yvonne Coghill, UK, each evocatively spoke about rising inequality in the health system caused in part by racism. This has been declared a public health crisis in the US. We must display resolve to tackle such problems, every single day, in every country.

In the 10-minute oral presentations, there were multiple examples of excellence. We heard from Taiwan’s Dr Juang Wang-Chuan on implementing holistic inpatient decision support services based on machine learning and Brazil’s Dr Maria Magalhaes, Dr Mansur Nacime and Dr Barreto Paloma on their research conducted across 10 Brazilian public hospitals on a strategic organizational learning model for improving compliance of Safety Operation Procedures (PSO).

Dr Frances Mortimer, UK, and public health officer Dr Sumaia Al-Ariki discussed a challenge at the top of all our minds—how to maintain quality and safety in periods of great stress, be it a pandemic, a national disaster, war, or a terrorist attack. The big question asked was: “How do we stay safe, effective and person-centred in all situations?” Dr Al-Ariki provided an account of the crisis in Yemen where around 21 million people are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance, including 11 million children. Only half of the country’s health facilities are operating and there are no doctors in 67 of Yemen’s 333 districts. The largest humanitarian crisis we could imagine is raging there right now.

We also heard from Professor Joanne Travaglia, Australia, how marginalized or minority groups within society may be at higher risk of iatrogenic harm. Professor Travaglia’s cross-cutting theme applied the lens of social epidemiology to inform a review of the incidence of harm. This thought-provoking presentation discussed the intersectional and therefore compounding nature of vulnerability; it considered how biologically-based expressions of social inequality (e.g., poverty), layered over with discrimination, lead to an increased risk of harm.

Our human factors colleagues did what their expertise always does and challenged us to think differently. Professor Pascale Carayon, US, provided a human factors and systems engineering perspective on addressing quality chasms. Associate Professor Robyn Clay‐Williams, Australia, focused on emergency departments and the human factors and ergonomics that contribute to resilience in these specialized environments.

Professor Trish Greenhalgh, UK, amongst the most innovative researchers internationally of all those in health services investigations, provided a new conceptual framework for planning and evaluating remote consultation services. The expansion of consultations via phone or video and the promotion of websites for self-management was pandemic-induced but has since been adopted by the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) as the default way forward. Professor Greenhalgh discussed the political, organisational, technical, relational, and clinical challenges.

Changing pace and focus, Drs Ifeoma Tony‐Monye, Sandra Esin, Derick Nwosu and Joseph Enegela shared insights from Nigeria’s program to improve the quality of care for patients enrolled in HIV care and treatment facilities through the introduction of a bi-annual performance review. The study showed no significant improvement in the quality of HIV service delivery from the intervention; and from a quality point of view, demonstrated the complexity of such interventions as well as the importance of ongoing evaluations. Important messages, indeed.

Looking back at all the sessions I managed to cover over four days of fantastic knowledge dissemination, I was heartened by the scope of the ISQua endeavour, the tenacity of individuals to pursue excellence, and the responsiveness of our ISQua networks to provide wonderful education and learning opportunities to all who come seeking answers.

While the COVID-19 pandemic prevented us from meeting in person, we must acknowledge the enormous effort of the organizing committee and all contributors to making this virtual meeting truly fulfilling. Dr Riccardo Tartaglia, co-chair of the Program Planning Committee, and indeed the whole committee, were marvellous.  I also make special mention of the dedicated ISQua team in Dublin who have a huge reach across the globe in supporting the Board and ISQua members and stakeholders to promulgate our message.

Being a scientist at heart, I cannot resist data, and I think readers will also appreciate the following statistics:

  • 1,050 delegates attended
  • 83 countries were represented. Australia had the most delegates with 97, closely followed by Taiwan with 87 registrants, Italy, 73, the United States, 68, with Ireland, 65, rounding out the top five
  • 160 short oral presentations were delivered
  • 55 longer expert sessions were run
  • 137 scholarships were awarded – the most ever
  • 344 Posters were accepted

Many people provided feedback through our conference survey. We appreciated the support and have taken on board the suggestions. We were encouraged that 85% of respondents found the virtual experience to be value for money and 90% would recommend a virtual conference to their colleague.

Many of us who attended the conference know firsthand the impact the pandemic has had on the safety and quality of health care in our hospitals and communities. We thank everyone who participated for taking the time to attend the conference, share your insights and encourage others.

It is with enormous anticipation I look forward to the 38th international conference in Brisbane, Australia, scheduled to be held from 17-20 October 2022. We sincerely hope to see everyone associated with ISQua in person.

A call for papers will be out in October 2021. Rest assured, our team will once again work tirelessly and creatively, to bring you ISQua 2022.

Professor Jeffrey Braithwaite, BA, DipLR, MIR, MBA, PhD, FIML, FACHSM, FAHMS, FFPHRCP (UK), FAcSS (UK), Hon FRACMA

ISQua President

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Nourhan Kawtharani


Nourhan, a quality and safety coordinator with eight years of experience in ambulatory healthcare in Lebanon, aims to deepen her understanding of the systemic and holistic approach to healthcare through this fellowship.

She aims to identify gaps and develop tailored interventions that address specific contexts rather than applying general solutions. Engaging with diverse professionals and perspectives during this educational journey will expand the application of these concepts across different cultural settings.

Nourhan emphasizes the importance of promoting a culture of continuous learning and improvement within healthcare institutions, considering it a vital leadership responsibility to integrate quality and safety initiatives into the organizational culture.

Nourhan's commitment to patient safety and quality management includes sourcing practical resources and transforming insights into actionable knowledge to drive continued progress in healthcare practices and outcomes.

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Elom Otchi


Elom is passionate about improving quality of care and patient safety outcomes.

In view of this, he has had the opportunity to work in various capacities with various organisations including AfIHQSA, WHO, UNICEF and others undertaking research, supporting the development of national quality policies and strategies, facilitating the establishment of quality governance systems across all the levels of the health sector and building capacity of national and sub-national quality leads/teams to institutionalize the practice of quality and patient safety across the continent.

He has also worked extensively across all levels of care in the health sector of Ghana, including leading the Quality & Patient Safety program in its largest teaching hospital.

I would like to use this Fellowship as a learning platform and an opportunity to acquire the requisite knowledge, skills and competencies to complement ongoing efforts by like-minded individuals and organizations to continuously advance improve the quality and patient safety in Ghana and the continent.

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Stephen Taiye Balogun


Stephen is a Senior Programme Officer at the Institute of Human Virology in Nigeria as well as Country Representative for Health Information for All (HIFA).

Stephen plans to use this opportunity to maximise his impact by championing the cause of patient safety and quality in Nigeria and across Africa.

Stephen says "Quality and safety is a major wheel through which universal healthcare coverage can be achieved. The goal is to be a bridge in the gap between the International Quality Improvement and Patient Safety community and my country to ensure rapid spread, adoption, implementation and practice."

We are looking forward to working with both Stephen and our 2020 winner Rhoda Kalondu over the next year.

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Dr Rhoda Kalondu


Rhoda is the Head of the Patient Safety Unit at Kenyatta Hospital in Nairobi and wants to use this Fellowship to learn how to establish a culture of safety and develop systems for assessment and analysis at her institution, and more widely. As well as this, Rhoda intends to develop and execute an intervention to improve patient safety in Kenyatta National Hospital.

It is one thing to institute measures and processes for improvement, but quite another to change the culture of an environment. Rhoda's ambition to lead others in this change inspired the panel.

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Dr Subhrojyoti Bhowmick


I am an MBBS graduate from Calcutta University with a Gold Medal in Gynecology & Obstetrics.

I have completed M.D in Pharmacology from IPGME& R, Kolkata and have over 12 years of experience in the field of Clinical Research, Pharmacovigilance and Medication management in Hospitals.

I have completed certification in Clinical Research Administration & Project Management from Stanford University, USA and in Patient Safety from Johns Hopkins University, USA.

I am an Assessor for National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Health care providers (NABH), India assessing hospitals for medication safety and clinical quality standards and NABH Assessor for Ethics Committee Accreditation program in India as well.

I serve as the Chairperson, Institutional Ethics Committee of Health Point Hospital, Kolkata and am associated with 2 other Hospital ethics committees as a member.

I finished my Fellowship in Healthcare Quality from the International Society of Quality in Healthcare (ISQua) from Ireland in 2017.

I have published several research articles and have also authored a chapter on “Regulations governing Clinical Trial” in the book “Fundamentals of Clinical Trial & Research”.

I am a peer reviewer for prestigious international journals like the British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, CNS Drugs and Drug Safety case reports.

I am the recipient of the UK Seth Oration Award for Best Clinical Pharmacology paper by the Indian Pharmacological Society in 2009 and the “Most promising Healthcare professional in Patient Safety in India” award by the Asian African Chamber of Commerce and Industry in October 2018.

Recently in April 2019, I received the Young Quality Achiever award by Consortium of Accredited Healthcare Organizations (CAHO), India for 2019 for my work in the field of medication safety and clinical research.

I have a keen interest in teaching and am visiting adjunct faculty of Pharmacology at KMC, Mangalore, India and for Healthcare technology at MAKAUT, Kolkata, India.

I was associated with Stanford University School of Medicine, in the USA as a Senior Clinical Research Associate from 2015 to 2017 and have certification in Biostatistics, Evidence-based Medicine and Medical Writing from Stanford University.

Currently, I am working as the Clinical Director of Academics, Medical Quality and Clinical Research at Peerless Hospital and B K Roy Research Centre, Kolkata.

I am very happy and thrilled to receive the prestigious ISQua Lucian Leape Patient safety Fellowship Award for 2019 and I look forward to honing my skills further in the field of healthcare quality and patient safety through my experiences during this fellowship.

I sincerely believe that successful completion of this fellowship will help me evolve as a more confident Patient safety leader in India who in turn can provide significant inputs on policy changes through NABH for the Indian healthcare system.

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