Putting Safety Into the Genome of Healthcare with Dr. Peter Lachman episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 2, 2026 · 1H 20M

Putting Safety Into the Genome of Healthcare with Dr. Peter Lachman

from Leading Quality

Why This Episode MattersPatient safety has often been built around what happens after harm occurs: incident reports, investigations, accountability, and corrective action. In this episode, Dr. Peter Lachman argues for a more proactive and moral view of safety: one where teams talk about risk every day, anticipate who may be harmed next, and make safety part of the “genome” of healthcare education, leadership, governance, and frontline work.Key Ideas Explored The early safety event that became Dr. Lachman’s “big why” for patient safety work.  Why professionalism and good intentions are not enough to make care safe.  The shift from retrospective harm review to proactive risk prediction.  The SAFE program as a practical way to help frontline teams talk about safety every day.  Why safety and quality need to become social movements, not just programs or products. Takeaways for Quality Leaders Treat adverse events as signals of system design, not simply individual failure.  Build daily routines that help teams ask who is at risk before harm occurs.  Make safety part of training, clinical reasoning, and leadership language from the start.  Pay attention to culture: what people talk about, what they notice, and what they are willing to learn from.  In low-resource settings, do not underestimate the power of people, relationships, and practical methods. Continue the ConversationDr. Peter Lachman on LinkedInResources & Frameworks Referenced SAFE program / Situation Awareness for Everyone  Patient Safety Movement Foundation Kiani Fellowship  The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)  To Err Is Human (Institute of Medicine Report, 1999) Crossing the Quality Chasm (Institute of Medicine Report, 2001) Donabedian’s structure-process-outcome model  SEIPS model / Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety  Safety-I and Safety-II  Great Ormond Street patient and family safety reporting work FlaQuM / House of Trust model  Quality 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0  Patient safety as a social movementLeading Quality is a podcast for healthcare leaders committed to improving systems, culture, and outcomes.If you found this episode valuable, follow the show, rate and review the podcast, or share it with a colleague working to improve care.Connect with Jason Meadows on LinkedIn for more insights on healthcare quality and leadership.Help us build this podcast  community from the ground up: share your top insight from this episode and where you’re seeing it in your own work. I read every response and will share what we’re learning over time in future episodes and other ways.New episodes published every other Thursday at 7AM Eastern Time.Credits:Host, Writer, and Executive Producer Jason Meadows, MDProduced by Thrive Healthcare ImprovementEdited by Milan Milosavljevic

Why This Episode Matters Patient safety has often been built around what happens after harm occurs: incident reports, investigations, accountability, and corrective action. In this episode, Dr. Peter Lachman argues for a more proactive and moral view of safety: one where teams talk about risk every day, anticipate who may be harmed next, and make safety part of the “genome” of healthcare education, leadership, governance, and frontline work. Key Ideas Explored The early safety event tha...

NOW PLAYING

Putting Safety Into the Genome of Healthcare with Dr. Peter Lachman

0:00 1:20:37

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

No similar episodes found.

No similar podcasts found.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Leading Quality?

This episode is 1 hour and 20 minutes long.

When was this Leading Quality episode published?

This episode was published on July 2, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Why This Episode MattersPatient safety has often been built around what happens after harm occurs: incident reports, investigations, accountability, and corrective action. In this episode, Dr. Peter Lachman argues for a more proactive and moral view...

Can I download this Leading Quality episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!