Still Not Safe
Patient Safety and the Middle-Managing of American Medicine
Robert Wears and Kathleen Sutcliffe
Reviews and Awards
"This quality book clearly demonstrates that, in order to solve a complex problem, one must look at it from multiple perspectives. It will take a number of combined initiatives to drive the change needed to move forward in the reduction of medical errors, as the field has been stagnant for over two decades with the ideas currently in place." -- Blair A Hebner, Doody's Reviews
"Reading Still Not Safe is like talking with Wears and Sutcliffe as they share honest, and at times dark, truths of the patient safety movement, while instilling a desire to continue this vital work. Read the book and reflect on your role in improving the safety of patient care." -- Pascale Carayon, PhD, Procter & Gamble Bascom Professor in Total Quality, University of Wisconsin, Madison
"This extraordinary book is guaranteed to transform your thinking, whether you are a healthcare professional, a social scientist, or an ordinary citizen wanting to understand how good intentions get subverted - and why simple solutions, however appealing, should be regarded with suspicion." -- Gary Klein, PhD, CEO, ShadowBox LLC
"An incisive lament and reflection on the early promise and subsequent waning of patient safety. But also a hopeful vision of a return to safety science, a deeper understanding of clinical work, and the potential for safer healthcare. A wonderful gift." -- Charles Vincent, PhD, Director, Oxford Healthcare Improvement
"This important and controversial book argues that the field of patient safety has stalled out because it has become insular, bureaucratic, and overly medicalized. Agree or disagree, Still Not Safe is an important contribution to the literature and will cause readers to look at the field of patient safety with a refreshing new perspective." -- Robert M. Wachter, MD, Professor and Chair, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco; author of The Digital Doctor and Understanding Patient Safety
"This quality book clearly demonstrates that, in order to solve a complex problem, one must look at it from multiple perspectives. It will take a number of combined initiatives to drive the change needed to move forward in the reduction of medical errors, as the field has been stagnant for over two decades with the ideas currently in place." -- Doody's Reviews