Biography:Annegret Hannawa
Prof. Annegret Friederike Hannawa | |
---|---|
Born | Konstanz, Germany |
Nationality | German |
Alma mater | San Diego State University (SDSU), Arizona State University (ASU) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Safe Communication, Patient Safety, Healthcare quality |
Institutions | Lugano, Università della Svizzera italiana (USI) |
Website | www.annegrethannawa.com |
Annegret Friederike Hannawa (born April 27, 1979 in Konstanz, Germany ) is a German communication scientist and founding director of the Center for the Advancement of Healthcare Quality and Safety (CAHQS) at the Università della Svizzera italiana in Lugano.[1]
Studies
Hannawa studied Interpersonal Communication at San Diego State University (California , USA), where she earned a master's degree in 2006.[2]
She then began her Ph.D. studies in Health Communication at Arizona State University (ASU) in Tempe, Arizona (USA). Her dissertation developed a communication science model of "Physician Mistake Disclosure."[3] In 2009, Hannawa received her doctorate from ASU.[4]
Academic career and work
Hannawa received her first academic appointment at Wake Forest University (WFU) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA, as tenure-track assistant professor in the Department of Communication Studies.[5] In 2011, she was appointed to a tenure-track professorship in health communication and research methodology at the Faculty of Communication, Università della Svizzera italiana (USI, Lugano, Switzerland), where she still works today.[6]
Hannawa conducted a grant-funded international congress entitled "Communicating Medical Error (COME)" in 2013.[7] The conference evolved into the nonprofit organization "ISCOME Global Center for the Advancement of Communication Science in Healthcare."[8] To date, Hannawa leads this research association as its founding president-elect.[9] Also in 2013, she received funding from the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) to develop evidence-based communication guidelines for disclosing medical errors to patients.[10] In 2019, the Swiss Federal Office of Public Health tasked her to analyze the pandemic communication surrounding Covid-19.[11][12]
In 2016, Hannawa founded an interdisciplinary Center for the Advancement of Healthcare Quality and Safety (CAHQS) at the Università della Svizzera italiana.[13] In the same year, she was elected as a scientific expert to the ELSI Advisory Board of the Swiss Personalized Health Network (SPHN).[14] In addition, she received honorary titles as Associate Faculty at Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health (Baltimore, Maryland, USA)[15] and Cardiff University School of Medicine (Wales, United Kingdom).[6] In the same year, she was awarded the "Jozien Bensing Research Award".[16] In 2023, the government or the Swiss Canton of Uri recognized her with an appointment as Ambassador.[17]
Research
Hannawa's research focuses primarily on how "safe communication" can prevent harmful errors in everyday clinical practice and ensure high-quality healthcare, particularly in the digital age.[18] In her scientific research, she has evaluated over 1000 cases of harm in hospitals.[19][20] According to her statistics, 53 patients die every day in Germany as a result of treatment errors;[21] up to 80 percent of these cases can be traced back to unsafe communication.[22][23] From this evidence, Hannawa developed a science-based "SACCIA safe communication" model that conveys five competencies that can help people build resilience against communication failures.[24] Meanwhile, she has extended her safe communication research to other high-risk contexts, such as Covid-19,[25][26][27] airborne rescues[28][29] and climate change.[30]
Awards
- Jozien Bensing Research Award, 2016.[31]
See also
- Safety
- Patient safety
- Medical error
- Human error
- Interpersonal communication
- Healthcare quality
- Health Communication
- Digitization
References
- ↑ "Our Team" (in en-US). http://patientsafetycenter.org/our-team.
- ↑ Hannawa, Annegret F.; Spitzberg, Brian H. (2009-01-07). ""My Child Can Beat Your Child": Toward a Measure of Parental Self-Evaluation Maintenance (PSEM)". Journal of Family Communication 9 (1): 23–42. doi:10.1080/15267430802561584. ISSN 1526-7431. https://doi.org/10.1080/15267430802561584.
- ↑ Hannawa, Annegret F. (2009-07-31). "Negotiating Medical Virtues: Toward the Development of a Physician Mistake Disclosure Model". Health Communication 24 (5): 391–399. doi:10.1080/10410230903023279. ISSN 1041-0236. PMID 19657822. https://doi.org/10.1080/10410230903023279.
- ↑ "Hannawa, Annegret Friederike" (in it). https://search.usi.ch/it/persone/6e848ddf2f9b33ced651c8174719f0d9/hannawa-annegret-friederike.
- ↑ "July 2010 Faculty Focus" (in en). 2010-07-01. http://news.wfu.edu/2010/07/01/july-2010-faculty-focus/.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 "Dr. Annegret Hannawa, PhD" (in en-US). http://usi.to/nx2.
- ↑ "COME - Conference - Communicating Medical Error". https://www.come.usi.ch/.
- ↑ "About" (in en-US). https://www.iscome.org/who-we-are.
- ↑ "Board" (in en-US). https://www.iscome.org/board-members.
- ↑ "Swiss National Science Foundation SNSF | P3 Research Grant Search Database | Projects - People – Publications" (in en). http://p3.snf.ch/.
- ↑ Hannawa, Annegret F.; Stojanov, Ana (2022-12-28). ""Compliant Supporters," "Anxious Skeptics," and "Defiant Deniers": A Latent Profile Analysis of People's Responses to COVID-19 Communications". Health Communication: 1–13. doi:10.1080/10410236.2022.2162224. ISSN 1532-7027. PMID 36576172. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36576172/.
- ↑ "The quality of public communication during COVID-19: symptoms of a wider malaise | Swiss Medical Weekly" (in en-US). https://smw.ch/index.php/smw/announcement/view/57.
- ↑ "Center for the Advancement of Healthcare Quality and Patient Safety" (in en-US). http://patientsafetycenter.org/.
- ↑ "ELSI Advisory Group (ELSIag)" (in de-DE). https://sphn.ch/de/organisation/governance/elsi-advisory-group/.
- ↑ "Faculty" (in en). https://publichealth.jhu.edu/faculty/3320/annegret-f-hannawa.
- ↑ "USI professor wins Jozien Bensing Research Award 2016" (in en). https://www.com.usi.ch/en/feeds/3995.
- ↑ "Professor Hannawa appointed ambassador of Uri" (in en). https://www.usi.ch/en/feeds/26552.
- ↑ Ovretveit, John; Wu, Albert; Street, Richard; Thimbleby, Harold; Thilo, Friederike; Hannawa, Annegret (2017-03-20). "Using and choosing digital health technologies: a communications science perspective" (in en). Journal of Health Organization and Management 31 (1): 28–37. doi:10.1108/JHOM-07-2016-0128. ISSN 1477-7266. PMID 28260405. https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/JHOM-07-2016-0128/full/html.
- ↑ "Von wegen "Soft-Skill"" (in de). https://www.landdergesundheit.de/beteiligung/wegen-soft-skill.
- ↑ Rundschau, Lausitzer (2019-03-10). "Aktuelle Studie: Patienten verstehen oft nur Bahnhof" (in de). https://www.lr-online.de/aktuelle-studie-patienten-verstehen-oft-nur-bahnhof-38260800.html.
- ↑ "Schweigen gefährdet Menschenleben" (in de). 2017-09-14. https://www.fr.de/wirtschaft/schweigen-gefaehrdet-menschenleben-11019743.html.
- ↑ "Kommunikation zwischen Arzt und Patient - Das große Risiko des gegenseitigen Nicht-Verstehens" (in de-DE). https://www.deutschlandfunk.de/kommunikation-zwischen-arzt-und-patient-das-grosse-risiko.724.de.html?dram:article_id=399265.
- ↑ Nikolaus Nützel: Patientensicherheit: Wenn Schweigen gefährlich ist. Bayern 2, 15.09.2017.
- ↑ Camia, Valeria. "Mangelhafte Kommunikation zwischen Arzt und Patient? Manchmal richtet sie mehr Schaden an als die Krankheit selbst" (in it). https://www.ticinoscienza.ch/de/news.php?wenn-mangelhafte-kommunikation-zwischen-arzt-und-patient-mehr-schaden-anrichtet-als-die-krankheit-selbst.
- ↑ "Our Work" (in en-US). http://patientsafetycenter.org/ourwork.
- ↑ Hannawa, Annegret F.; Stojanov, Ana (2022-12-28). ""Compliant Supporters," "Anxious Skeptics," and "Defiant Deniers": A Latent Profile Analysis of People's Responses to COVID-19 Communications". Health Communication: 1–13. doi:10.1080/10410236.2022.2162224. ISSN 1532-7027. PMID 36576172. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36576172/.
- ↑ "Communication during Covid-19: A Swiss National Study (11 April 2022)" (in en-GB). 2022-04-12. https://www.pslhub.org/learn/coronavirus-covid19/data-and-statistics/communication-during-covid-19-a-swiss-national-study-11-april-2022-r6598/.
- ↑ Hannawa, Annegret F (December 2021). "“We’re on our way:” A message from the mountains" (in en). Journal of Patient Safety and Risk Management 26 (6): 240–242. doi:10.1177/25160435211058145. ISSN 2516-0435. http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/25160435211058145.
- ↑ "Competence - Humanfaktoren in der Bergrettung" (in de-DE). https://competence.ch/?post_type=post&p=1163.
- ↑ "Building shared knowledge on the climate crisis" (in en). https://www.usi.ch/en/feeds/25970.
- ↑ "Awards – EACH" (in en-GB). https://each.international/eachevents/awards/.
External links
- Annegret Hannawa publications indexed by Google Scholar
- Annegret Hannawa publications indexed by PubMed
- Center for the Advancement of Healthcare Quality & Patient Safety (CAHQS)
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