Patient safety from the start: World Patient Safety Day 2025 dedicated to "Safe care for every newborn and every child"

World Patient Safety Day, celebrated every year on 17 September, was established by Resolution WHA72.6, approved at the World Health Organisation Assembly on 28 May 2019.

The theme selected for World Patient Safety Day 2025 is "Safe care for every newborn and every child"with the slogan "Patient safety from the start". The World Health Organisation thus highlights the priority of guaranteeing patient safety from the earliest stages of life, particularly with regard to the first care given to newborns and children.

Through this slogan, the WHO is calling on all sectors to commit to the continuous improvement of the quality and safety of care, focussing on evidence-based practices, safe environments and the active participation of families and health professionals from the earliest moments of life.

The objectives proposed by the WHO are:

  1. Raising awareness of the risks to patient safety in neonatal and paediatric care, recognising the specific needs of children;
  2. Involving governments, health centres, professionals and society in the adoption of effective measures that promote safe care from the beginning of life;
  3. Strengthening the active role and autonomy of parents, carers and the children themselves, promoting their informed participation and the sharing of responsibilities;
  4. Encouraging research and the collection of scientific data to help improve safety in the care of newborns and children.

As early as 2021, the WHO emphasised the importance of this issue by dedicating World Patient Safety Day to safe maternal and neonatal care, drawing attention to the intrinsic vulnerability of early life.

The Order of Physiotherapists joins in celebrating this day, reinforcing its commitment to safe care from the beginning of life. Physiotherapists play an essential role in providing safe care in paediatric settings, from assessment and clinical intervention to effective communication with families and interdisciplinary teams, always promoting the well-being and protection of children. To mark the date, the Order of Physiotherapists' Patient Safety and Paediatric Physiotherapy Working Groups have jointly developed specific materials to raise awareness and support clinical practice.

Check out the recommendations and checklist for for safe physiotherapy practices in paediatrics.

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Pedro Maciel Barbosa

Specialist physiotherapist at the Matosinhos Local Health Unit Sub-coordinator for Primary Health Care, Matosinhos Local Health Unit Visiting Assistant Professor at the Porto School of Health Member of the Board of Directors of the Foundation for Health - SNS Member of the General Council of the Order of Physiotherapists

Carlos Sand

Carlos Areia has been a physiotherapist since 2013, and has worked in various hospitals, clinics and clubs in both Portugal and the UK. He began his academic career at Oxford University in 2016, where he led a clinical trial comparing physiotherapy vs surgery in anterior cruciate injuries in 32 hospitals in England. In 2018 she moved to the neurosciences department, where she developed her own studies on remote monitoring of vital signs, which were implemented during the pandemic. Here he discovered his passion for data, and in 2022, he joined Digital Science as a Data Scientist. He completed his PhD earlier this year, and has more than 60 publications in journals such as The Lancet, BMJ, Cochrane, among others. He is also an honorary lecturer at Oxford Brookes University and a consultant in clinical research.

Eduardo José Brazete Carvalho Cruz

PhD in Physiotherapy from the University of Brighton, UK. Post-Doctorate in Epidemiology from the National School of Public Health at the New University of Lisbon.
Coordinator of the Studies and Planning Office of the Order of Physiotherapists. Coordinating Professor of the Physiotherapy Department of the School of Health of the Polytechnic Institute of Setúbal (ESS-IPS). President of the ESS-IPS Technical-Scientific Council. Coordinator of the Physiotherapy Department at ESS-IPS. Integrated Researcher at the Comprehensive Health Research Centre (CHRC) (a partnership between FCM-UNL, the National School of Public Health, the University of Évora, the Lisbon Institute of Global Mental Health and Santo Espírito Hospital, Terceira Island, Azores).

Sara Souto Miranda

Sara Souto Miranda has a bachelor's and master's degree in physiotherapy from the University of Aveiro, and a postgraduate qualification in adult respiratory physiotherapy from the same institution. In 2023 she completed her double doctorate in Rehabilitation Sciences/Health, Medicine and Life Sciences at the Universities of Aveiro and Maastricht (Netherlands) and is currently working as a technical-scientific advisor to the Studies and Planning Office (GEP) of the Order of Physiotherapists, and as a guest lecturer at the Piaget Institute in Vila Nova de Gaia. As a member of the Respiratory Research and Rehabilitation Laboratory at the University of Aveiro (Lab3R), she has carried out applied research in which she has assessed and treated patients with respiratory pathology, having taken part in 6 research projects. Throughout her career she has published 19 scientific articles in international peer-reviewed journals with an impact factor, 1 book chapter and more than 50 abstracts in conference proceedings. She was a research volunteer at the Ciro rehabilitation centre (Centre for expertise in chronic organ failure) in the Netherlands, and is currently a member of the Guideline Methodology Network of European Respiratory Society. She was honoured by European Lung Foundation e European Respiratory Society for carrying out patient-centred research, by the Directorate General for Higher Education with a merit grant for his master's degree, and by the Ciro Centre with a grant to support research abroad.

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