Ten (10) Commandments of Quality & Patient Safety

On the maiden World Patient Safety Day celebration, I propose what I call 10 Commandments of Patient safety! This has been informed by experiences from practice and literature (Petrella, 1977).

On the maiden World Patient Safety Day celebration, I propose what I call 10 Commandments of Patient safety! This has been informed by experiences from practice and literature (Petrella, 1977).

It is also informed by lessons learnt from other fields particularly organizational development. I believe that, if health systems globally heed to these commandments, there will be a significant reduction in the needless harms that are inflicted on patients.

Patient safety is one of eight (8) healthcare dimensions (i.e. timeliness, integrity, efficient, effectiveness, integrated, equity, person-centred care and safety) that define quality. It is a proactive process that involves prevention and learning from harm!

Incidentally, it’s been twenty years since the publication of “to err is human” and a lot still needs to be done to improve the quality of care outcomes.

These commandments are therefore suggested:

  1. Thou shalt be authentic and genuine other than being fake, false and deceptive. Let’s make the patient happy. Let’s be nice to the patient. Let’s be “us” and portray our real selves and identities in the provision of care other than portraying our wishful selves! The beginning of authenticity is self-discovery!
  2. Thou shalt show compassion and care other than cruelty, disregard, recklessness and lack of attention! Let’s prioritize the needs and expectations of the patient and the larger community other than our own selfish and parochial interest. Let’s facilitate the autonomy, independence and respect of the patient other than abandonment!
  3. Thou shalt collaborate and work together rather than competing and undermining one another. Let us codesign healthcare with patients and consumers. Teamwork is key. No one person or professional can address the challenges of the health system. There is no heroism in the provision of quality and safe care!
  4. Thou shalt be inclined to Emotional Intelligence (EQ) than Intelligent Quotient (IQ). There is too much emphasis on the mind than the heart and emotive aspect of care. The reason a pregnant woman in a village somewhere will bypass your nicely built and well-equipped maternity block to the traditional birth attendant in a dilapidated and ill-equipped “maternity home” somewhere in spite of all your degrees and qualifications is emotional intelligence competencies! We are happy for you about your degrees and qualifications, congratulations but it is not enough! Add EQ to your IQ to be whole! The good thing is that EQ can be learned.
  5. Thou shalt confront and speak up on issues and situations other than being laid back, dodgy and evasive. Let us empower people and ourselves to learn to name the elephant in the room!
  6. Thou shalt be expressive of your feelings other than bottling up
  7. Thou shalt integrate, coordinate. Let us make the provision of care access more seamless and a “one-stop-shop” across the patient journey other than fragmentation and segregation!
  8. Thou shalt embrace continual learning other than blaming and shaming. A learning health system is stewarded by leadership committed to a culture of teamwork, collaboration and adaptability in support of continuous learning as a core aim.
  9. Thou shalt embed human factors and ergonomics! Let us design a health system to make it difficult for healthcare providers to make mistakes. Let us work to appreciate and understand the relationship between quality and systems! Let us stop passing the buck as healthcare providers always blaming the “system” for our inefficiencies and ineffectiveness forgetting that we are an integral part of the system! Fact is, without you, there is no system! Let us redesign our curriculum and medical education with equal emphasis on systems thinking and the use of medical jargons and vocabulary!
  10. Thou shalt love. Thou shalt always remember what Donabedian said in your practice and provision of care “Health care is a sacred mission … a moral enterprise and a scientific enterprise but not fundamentally a commercial one. We are not selling a product. We don’t have a consumer who understands everything and makes rational choices — and I include myself here. Doctors and nurses are stewards of something precious …Ultimately the secret of quality is love. You have to love your patient, you have to love your profession, you have to love your God. If you have love, you can then work backwards to monitor and improve the system”

Finally, let us stop the lip service and propaganda to quality and patient safety! Let us demonstrate visible commitment which seems to be very much in short supply in many parts of the world.

Let us uphold our individual and professional ethics and values in the provision of care! The question is, do you even have values and ethics as an individual at all?

Always remember that it is your own individual ethics and values that are essential for the success of any system including healthcare!

We are probably where we are because of our individual flaws and lack of individual values. The thing is, I can’t hear you because your character is louder than your voice!

OTCHI, Elom Hillary | FISQua, MPH, MA (Org. Devt), PGD, BSc

Expert, International Society of Quality in Healthcare (ISQua)

Technical Director, AfIHQSA

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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.

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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.

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Stephen Taiye Balogun


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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.

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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.

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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.

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