# Developing the University of Tartu in Estonia into a well-networked Patient Safety Research Centre (PATSAFE): A study protocol

**Authors:** Kaja PÕLLUSTE, Hiske Calsbeek, Carola Orrego, Marta Ballester, Rosa Suñol, Helena Vall-Roqué, Mari Kangasniemi, Siim Läänelaid, Joel Starkopf, Anne van Tuijl, Hub Wollersheim, Tiina Freimann, Liisi Mägi, Joaquim Bañeres, María del Mar Fernández-Maillo, Yvette Emond, Margus Lember, Alexandra Peters, Anne Hogden

PMC · DOI: 10.12688/openreseurope.15024.1 · Open Research Europe · 2022-09-05

## TL;DR

This paper outlines a project to develop the University of Tartu into a leading patient safety research center through international collaboration and training.

## Contribution

The project introduces a strategic partnership and training framework to enhance patient safety research in Estonia.

## Key findings

- The project will improve research capacity and methodology in patient safety at the University of Tartu.
- Early-stage researchers will gain hands-on training and soft skills to sustain patient safety research.
- A long-term research strategy will be developed to ensure the sustainability of patient safety research in Estonia.

## Abstract

Background: Patient safety (PS) is a serious global public health problem affecting all countries. Estimates show that around 10 percent of the patients are harmed during hospital care, resulting in 23 million disability-adjusted life years lost per year. Experts emphasize research advancements as a key precondition for safer care.

Aim: The Patient Safety Research Centre (PATSAFE) project enhances the Institute of Clinical Medicine of the University of Tartu’s (ICM-UT) research potential and capacities in PS in order to improve and strengthen knowledge and skills in methods, techniques and experience for PS research.

Methods: A strategic partnership with Avedis Donabedian Research Institute in Spain, and IQ Healthcare in the Netherlands, both international leaders in PS research, enables the development of a long-lasting knowledge exchange, allowing the ICM-UT to capitalise on its current achievements and to overcome gaps in scientific excellence in the field of PS research. These twining activities will strengthen and raise the research profile of the ICM-UT academic staff and early-stage researchers (ESRs), by implementing the hands-on training on methods, techniques, and experience in PS research. The project also encourages the active participation of ESRs in PS research by increasing their soft skills, to ensure the continuity and sustainability of PS research in ICM-UT. Finally, development of the research strategy on PS contributes to the long-term sustainability of PS research in Estonia. To implement these activities, PATSAFE foresees a comprehensive strategy consisting of knowledge exchange, soft research skills capacity building, strategic planning, and strong dissemination and exploitation efforts.

Expected results: As a result of the project, ICM-UT will have the capacity to carry out PS research using the appropriate methodology and the competences to apply state-of-the-art evidence-based strategies for PS research.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

18 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11195608/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11195608