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CURRICULUM VITAE

DATA PRIBADI
Nama : dr.ADIB ABDULLAH YAHYA,MARS
Pangkat : Brigjen TNI ((Purn
Purn))
Tempat//tanggal lahir
Tempat : Magelang,16 Februari 1949
Jabatan : President Asian Hospital Federation (AHF)
Agama : Islam
ALAMAT : Jl. Punai H-
H-24,Kel.Tengah,Jakarta Timur – 13540
Telp : (021)8404580
Fax : (021) 8408047
HP : 08161803497
E-MAIL : adibabdullahyahya@yahoo.com

PENDIDIKAN UMUM
SMA Negeri Magelang 1966
S1 : Fakultas Kedokteran Universitas Gajah Mada (UGM),
Yogyakarta, 1973
S2 : Fakultas Kesehatan Masyarakat, Universitas Indonesia (UI), Jakarta,
Program Kajian Administrasi Rumah Sakit ( KARS )

PENDIDIKAN MILITER
Sekolah Staf dan Komando TNI Angkatan Darat (SESKOAD), 1987/1988

PELATIHAN
Combined Humanitarian Assistance Response Training, oleh Singapore Armed Forces (SAF), Singapura, 2000
Health as a Bridge for Peace Workshop, oleh World Health Organization (WHO), Yogyakarta, 2000
1
PENGALAMAN JABATAN

Komandan Detasemen Kesehatan Pasukan Pengamanan Presiden (DanDenkes


Paspampres),
Paspampres ), 1987-
1987-1991
Kepala Rumah Sakit “Muhammad Ridwan Meuraksa
Meuraksa”,”, Jakarta, 1992
Kepala Kesehatan Daerah Militer (Kakesdam
Kakesdam)) Jaya, Jakarta, 1993
Komandan Pusat Pendidikan Kesehatan TNI – AD,1995 – 1999
Wakil Kepala Pusat Kesehatan TNI, 1999 – 2000
Kepala RSPAD Gatot Soebroto
Soebroto,, 2000 – 2002
Dekan Fakultas Kedokteran UPN, Jakarta, 2000 – 2002
Wakil Ketua Tim Dokter Kepresidenan RI, 2000 – 2002
Direktur Kesehatan TNI Angkatan Darat (Dirkesad
Dirkesad),
), 2002
2002--2004
Wakil Ketua Tim Pemeriksaan kesehatan untuk calon Presiden dan calon Wakil
Presiden RI Th.2004
Ketua Tim Pemeriksaan Kesehatan calon Hakim Agung RI Th.2006
Dosen KAJIAN ADMINISTRASI RUMAH SAKIT (KARS), FKM UI
DIREKTUR UTAMA RUMAH SAKIT MMC

ORGANISASI
Ketua Ikatan Rumah Sakit Jakarta Metropolitan (IRSJAM), 2000
2000--2003
Ketua Umum Perhimpunan Rumah Sakit Seluruh Indonesia ( PERSI), 20032003--2009
Ketua Divisi Kemahkamahan Majelis Kehormatan Etik Kedokteran (MKEK) IDI Pusat
Ketua Komite Tetap Bidang Kebijakan Kesehatan KADIN Indonesia
Anggota TNP2K
Tim Konsultan Institut Manajemen Risiko Klinis ( IMRK )
Koordinator Bidang 1 : KAJIAN KESELAMATAN PASIEN, KKPRS
Instruktur HOPE ( Hospital Preparedness for Emergencies and Disasters}
PRESIDENT OF ASIAN HOSPITAL FEDERATION ( AHF ) 2009 – 2011
2
JAKARTA DECLARATION 2007
DAN TAHAP PENERAPANNYA

Dr. ADIB A YAHYA, MARS


PRESIDENT
ASIAN HOSPITAL FEDERATION
( AHF )
P4PS
Next
Our Patient Steps
Safety Journey …
Despite formidable barriers, the authors expect to see dramatic advances in the next five
years in the following areas: implementation of electronic health records, wide diffusion of
proven and safe practices, spread of training on teamwork and safety, and full disclosure to
patients following injury. However, while these advances will have an impact on reducing
errors, they represent only a small fraction of the work that needs to be done. To create
comprehensive, nationwide change, pressure must be applied to the health care industry.
Public outrage, reformed reimbursement policies, and regulation can create some of this
needed pressure. In addition, the authors suggest payment incentives to accelerate
widespread adoption. It may be equally important, they say, to create negative financial
consequences for hospitals or organizations that continue to perform unsafe practices.
The single most important step, however, is to set and adhere to "strict, ambitious,
quantitative, and well-
well-tracked national goals," say Leape and Berwick. They urge AHRQ to
bring together organizations, including JCAHO, CMS, and the American Medical
Association, to agree to a set of patient safety goals to be reached by 2010. The most
important lesson of the past five years, the authors argue, is that "we will not become safe
until we choose to become safe."

FROM COMPLIANCY TO SAFETY CULTURE


To Err is Human:
Building a Safer Health System
(1999/2000)

IOM Study of Medical Errors


Sejak 2006 : Workshop
Keselamatan Pasien & UU.N0.44 TH.2009
Manajemen Risiko Tentang Rumah
Klinis, telah diikuti Sakit :
hampir 1900 Staf RS Keselamatan Pasien
To Err is Human: (Dr, Perawat, dll) dari + wajib dilaksanakan
Building a Safer Health 250 Rumah Sakit oleh Rumah Sakit
System (1999/2000) seluruh Indonesia

WHO SEAR Patient Safety


Workshop on
“ Patients for Patient Safety”
1 Juni 2005, PERSI Jakarta Declaration
membentuk badan
Jakarta, Hotel Four Seasons, 19
nasional : KKPRS
July 2007

2000 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

21 Agustus 2005 Pencanangan

Gerakan Keselamatan Pasien 2008 :

oleh Menteri Kesehatan RI, Keselamatan Pasien RS telah

2004, 27 Oktober : mulai di Akreditasi oleh KARS


di Jakarta
WHO memimpin
gerakan keselamatan
pasien dengan
membentuk : World 2006, KKI : Standar
Alliance for Patient Kompetensi Dokter :
Safety, sekarang
“WHO Patient Safety” Keselamatan Pasien
London Declaration 2006

Patients for Patient Safety

WHO World Alliance for Patient Safety


( WAPS)
The London Declaration

“In honor of those who have died,


those left disabled, our loved ones today
and the world’s children yet to be born,
we will strive for excellence, so that all
involved in healthcare are as safe as
possible as soon as possible.
This is our pledge of partnership.”
PERTH DECLARATION FOR PATIENT SAFETY

The Inaugural Australian


Patients for Patient Safety Workshop, Perth,
July 2009
Patients for Patient Safety
WHO South East Asia Regional Patient Safety Workshop on “ Patients for
Patient Safety”
Jakarta, 17 – 19 July 2007
- P4PS -

• Negara peserta (10) : Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Indonesia,


Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Timor-Leste. Juga
Pakar2 WHO dari Patients for Patient Safety.
• Indonesia : Dr Sutoto, Dr Gunawan, Dr Nico Lumenta, Dr Marius
Widjajarta, Dr Purnamawati, Paula Dewi, Ermiel Thabrani, KKI Dr
Hardi Yusa, PERSI Dr Adib Yahya, PPNI, Arsada Dr Yvonne
• Peserta adalah Patient Safety Stake Holder : Patients, NGO
Advocates, Medical Council, Medical Association, Nurse
Association, Policy makers
• Topik : Building partnerships, Ongoing work in the region,
Patients & Consumer voices, Regional priorities & challenges,
Action planning.
•  Jakarta Declaration
WHO SEAR Patient Safety Workshop on
“ Patients for Patient Safety”

Jakarta Declaration

Jakarta, Hotel Four Seasons, 19 July 2007


JAKARTA DECLARATION

On Patients for Patient Safety in Countries of


South--East Asia We, the patients,
South
consumer advocates, health care professionals,
policy--makers and representatives of
policy
nongovernmental organizations,
professional associations and
regulatory councils having reflected on the issue
of patient safety in the regional workshop on
‘‘Patients for Patient Safety’’, 17-
17-19 July 2007, in
Jakarta, Indonesia,
Referring to Resolution SEA/RC59/R3 on Promoting
Patient Safety in Health Care, adopted at the 59th
Session of the Regional Committee for South-
South-East Asia
Region, which notes “with concern the high human and
financial toll of adverse events” and the vicious cycle
of adverse events, law-
law-suits, and the practice of
defensive medicine and the rising cost of health care,
and urges Member States to “engage patients,
consumer associations, health care workers, and
professional associations, hospital associations,
health care accreditation bodies and policy-
policy-makers, in
building safer health care systems and creating a
culture of safety within the health care institutions”,
Considering the recommendations in the
proceedings of the first Regional
Workshop on Patient Safety,
Safety, 12-
12-14 July
2006, in New Delhi, India,

Inspired by the WHO World Alliance for


Patient Safety, Patients for Patient Safety
London Declaration (March 2006),
We,

1. Declare that no patients should suffer preventable


harm;
2. Agree that patients are at the centre of all patient
safety efforts;
3. Acknowledge that fear of blame and punishment
should not deter open and honest communication
between patients and health care providers;
4. Recognize that we must work in partnership in order to
achieve the major behavioral and system changes that
are required to address patient safety in our Region;
5. Believe that:
• transparency, accountability and the human touch
are paramount to a safe health care system;
• mutual trust and respect between health care
professionals and patients are fundamental;
• patients and their carers should know why a
treatment is given and be informed of all risks, big or
small, so that they can participate in decisions related
to their care;
• patients should have access to their medical records;
6. Recognize that when harm does occur:
occur:
• there should be a system in place whereby the
event can be reported and investigated with due
respect to confidentiality;
• patients and their families should be fully informed
and supported;
• providers involved in unintentional harm should
also receive support;
• corrective actions should be taken to prevent
future harm and widely share lessons learnt;
• there should be a mechanism to fairly compensate
the patient and their family;
7. Commit to:
• consumer empowerment through frank and
candid education;
• partnering with the media to encourage
responsible reporting and seize opportunities
to educate the public;
• active consumer participation in adverse
event reporting;
• two
two--way communication among patients and
health care providers that encourages
questioning;
• meaningful patient representation on patient
safety committees and forums;
8. Pledge to achieve through sustained efforts
the following goals:
• functioning quality and patient safety
systems in every health care facility,
both public and private, starting with the
establishment of a patient safety committee
and of an adverse event reporting and
response system;
system;
• adherence to guidelines that are evidence-
evidence-
based and ethical and avoidance of irrational
treatments such as unnecessary medicines,
investigations and surgical procedures;
• continuing medical education for health care
professionals;
• integrate patient safety concepts into prepre-- and
in--service training of allied health care
in
professionals;
• rational load of patients in each health care
facility;
• adequate resources devoted to patient safety;
• motivated and competent health care
professionals;
• satisfied patients and providers.
Wakil Indonesia terpilih
sebagai :
Chairman, WHO SEAR
Patient Safety Workshop
on “ Patients for Patient
Safety”
WHO SEA Regional Patient Safety Workshop on “ Patients for Patient Safety”
Jakarta, 17 – 19 July 2007
IMPLEMENTASI
P4PS
TUJUH LANGKAH MENUJU
KESELAMATAN PASIEN RUMAH SAKIT
BANGUN KESADARAN AKAN NILAI KP, Ciptakan kepemimpinan &
budaya yg terbuka & adil.
PIMPIN DAN DUKUNG STAF ANDA, Bangunlah komitmen & fokus
yang kuat & jelas tentang KP di RS Anda
INTEGRASIKAN AKTIVITAS PENGELOLAAN RISIKO, Kembangkan
sistem & proses pengelolaan risiko, serta lakukan identifikasi &
asesmen hal yang potensial bermasalah
KEMBANGKAN SISTEM PELAPORAN, Pastikan staf Anda agar dgn
mudah dapat melaporkan kejadian / insiden, serta RS mengatur
pelaporan kpd KKP-RS.
LIBATKAN DAN BERKOMUNIKASI DENGAN PASIEN,
Kembangkan cara-cara komunikasi yg terbuka dgn pasien
BELAJAR & BERBAGI PENGALAMAN TTG KP, Dorong staf anda
utk melakukan analisis akar masalah untuk belajar bagaimana &
mengapa kejadian itu timbul
CEGAH CEDERA MELALUI IMPLEMENTASI SISTEM KP, Gunakan
informasi yang ada tentang kejadian / masalah untuk melakukan
perubahan pada sistem pelayanan
KKP RS
NPSA – November 2008

Being Open should be on the core curriculum for all


healthcare professional training
Being Open should be adopted by senior clinicians
and throughout clinical services
Being Open should be on corporate induction
training for all staff of all trusts.
The proposed Being Open re- re-launch should be high
profile and should involve patients
Information packs for patients admitted to hospital
should include information on Being Open
TIGA AREA KETERLIBATAN

1. MELIBATKAN PASIEN DAN MASYARAKAT


DALAM MENGEMBANGKAN PELAYANAN YANG
LEBIH AMAN

2.MELIBATKAN PASIEN DALAM PROSES


PERAWATAN DAN PENGOBATAN DIRINYA
SENDIRI

3. BILA TERJADI SESUATU YANG TIDAK


DIHARAPKAN,DORONGLAH
DIHARAPKAN ,DORONGLAH UNTUK SALING
TERBUKA,KOMUNIKASI DUA ARAH ANTARA
PROFESIONAL KESEHATAN DAN PASIEN
AREA 1

MELIBATKAN PASIEN DAN MASYARAKAT


DALAM MENGEMBANGKAN PELAYANAN
YANG LEBIH AMAN

LIBATKAN MASYARAKAT,PASIEN DAN RELAWAN DALAM


SUATU WORKSHOP TENTANG KESELAMATAN PASIEN

LIBATKAN PERWAKILAN PASIEN DAN ANGGOTA


MASYARAKAT DALAM MENGEMBANGKAN SISTEM
PELAPORAN DAN PEMBELAJARAN MENGENAI MASALAH
KESELAMATAN PASIEN

PERWAKILAN PASIEN JUGA SEBAGAI ANGGOTA AKTIF DARI


KELOMPOK KERJA YANG SEDANG MENGEMBANGKAN
SOLUSI MASALAH KESELAMATAN PASIEN
Educating Patients, Too
AREA 2

MELIBATKAN PASIEN DALAM PROSES


PERAWATAN DAN PENGOBATAN DIRINYA
SENDIRI

BANYAK BUKTI YANG MENUNJUKKAN BAHWA PASIEN


SANGAT INGIN DILIBATKAN SEBAGAI MITRA DALAM PROSES
PENGOBATAN DIRINYA

KEMITRAAN INI BERARTI PETUGAS KESEHATAN PERLU


MELIBATKAN PASIEN DALAM :

- MENENTUKAN DIAGNOSA YANG TEPAT,


- MEMUTUSKAN PENGOBATAN YANG BENAR,
- MENDISKUSIKAN RISIKO DAN
- MEMASTIKAN OBAT DIBERIKAN DENGAN
BENAR,SERTA MONITOR
AREA 3

BILA TERJADI SESUATU YANG TIDAK DIHARAPKAN,


DIHARAPKAN,
DORONGLAH UNTUK SALING TERBUKA,KOMUNIKASI DUA
ARAH ANTARA PROFESIONAL KESEHATAN DAN PASIEN

KETERBUKAAN PADA SAAT TERJADI INSIDEN MERUPAKAN


UNSUR FUNDAMENTAL DALAM KEMITRAAN ANTARA PASIEN
DAN PEMBERI PELAYANAN KESEHATAN

BILA TERJADI INSIDEN, PASIEN ATAU KELUARGANYA


SANGAT INGIN MENDAPATKAN INFORMASI TENTENT
TANG APA
YANG SESUNGGUHNYA TERJADI

MEREKA JUGA MENGHARAPKAN SESEORANG


MENYAMPAIKAN “MAAF”
-COMMUNITY
INFORMATION &
MASYARAKAT EDUCATION :
HAK DAN KEWAJIBAN RS
HAK DAN KEWAJIBAN
PASIEN

-DPJP :
PATIENT EDUCATION
PASIEN INFORMATION &
COMMUNICATION

INSIDEN - EMPATHY
- OPEN DISCLOSURE

DIPERLUKAN :
COMMUNICATION SKILL
LANGKAH BERIKUTNYA
?
Next Steps
Promote PFPSC
– broadly throughout Country and with partner
organizations
– a visible partner in patient safety
Development of materials for public and provider education
Raising awareness of the importance of patient and family
involvement
– with the public, various media and with healthcare
leaders
Achieving program goals
– Every patient safe
Aligning with WHO initiatives
WHO World Alliance for Patient Safety and
Patients for Patient Safety

• Role of patients and caregivers – patient and consumer


involvement. Partnership and Collaboration.
Openness and honesty about risk and error

•Philosophy of empowering, enabling, partnering

• Ensures that the focus is on the patient perspective


and patient centeredness

•Workshop process and global expansion


The Health Professionals Role

• Create a user friendly environment


• Use your most readily available resource -
the patient and family
• Patients need honesty and transparency
• Be a change agent
Conceptual Framework for Safety
Where to from here?.... Training
Guidelines and Reporting
protocols
Just and non-
Performance & Leadership & Culture & punitive
evaluation
Process &
Responsibilities Training Flexible
system improvements Learning

Safety
Management
SBAR
Vision and Partnerships
commitment Structure, with clients and
Communication
Policies & Process & their families
procedures Safety Forums
Walkarounds
Environment
Follow-up

Reporting unsafe Change of Evaluation Communication


practices practice & follow-up & reporting
Low

Productivity/efficiency

High
Feeling overwhelmed…?
On the Road to Safety…

Have you ever noticed....anybody


going slower than you is an idiot,
and anyone going faster than you
is a maniac?

George Carlin
An Endless Journey
….
44

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