The relationship between patient safety climate and occupational safety climate in healthcare – A multi-level investigation

2017 ◽  
Vol 61 ◽  
pp. 187-198 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anders Pousette ◽  
Pernilla Larsman ◽  
Mats Eklöf ◽  
Marianne Törner
2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mostefa Shahabinejad ◽  
Hadi Khoshab ◽  
Kazem Najafi ◽  
Aboutalem Haghshenas

BACKGROUND: Improving patient safety is a global health imperative, and patient safety climate is one of the components one that plays an important role in promoting patient safety. Medical error reporting is a way through which it can be evaluated and prevented in the future. The aim of this study was to assess the relationship between patient safety climate and medical error reporting in military and civilian hospitals.METHODS: This research was conducted by using structural equation modeling in the selected hospitals of Iran in 2018. The study community consisted of 200 nurses in the military and 400 nurses in the civilian hospitals. By using Structural Equation Modeling, the relationship between patient safety climate and the rate of medical error reporting in the hospitals was measured by a questionnaire. Data was analyzed using SPSS 17 and LISREL 8.8 software.RESULTS: The mean score of patient safety climate was moderate in the hospitals. There was no significant relationship between the rate of medical error reporting and patient safety climate, while a significant difference was found between patient safety climate score and age, sex, job category, and type of hospital (P < 0.05).CONCLUSION: The results suggested that patient safety climate and the rate of reporting errors were not favorable in the studied hospitals, while there was a difference between safety climate dimensions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. s454-s455
Author(s):  
Amanda Hessels ◽  
Jingwen Guo

Background: Nearly 1 in 25 patients has a hospital infection at any given time, and 1 in 25 nurses suffers and bloodborne exposure every year. Basic procedures, termed standard precautions (SP) may prevent these outcomes, but they are not often used by healthcare workers. Unfortunately, data are largely limited by self-reporting because no standardized tools exist to capture observational data. Objective: The specific aim of this study was to describe the relationship between self-reported and observed SP adherence. Methods: This multisite, cross-sectional study included 2 elements: (1) surveys of nurses in US hospital units on perceptions of patient safety climate and reported SP adherence and (2) observational SP data. Survey data included 12 items on SP practices (eg, “how often you perform hand hygiene before touching a patient”) and 10 items on SP environment (eg, “my work area is not cluttered”), rated on a 5-point scale from “never” to “always” or from “strongly disagree” to ”strongly agree,” respectively. Using novel tools developed and previously pilot tested, we recruited and trained hospital-based staff on observational surveillance methodology to foster the National Occupational Research Agenda goals. The 10 observational SP items represented the following 4 categories: (1) hand hygiene, (2) personal protective equipment (PPE), (3) sharps, and (4) soiled linen handling. Observations of healthcare worker–patient interactions followed training and interrater reliability testing. All data were aggregated, and analyses were conducted at the unit level. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated to determine the relationship between reported and observed SP practices (level of significance, P < .05). Results: In total, 6,518 SP indications were observed and 500 surveys were collected from nurses on 54 units in 15 hospitals from 6 states. The final analytic sample included 5,285 SP indications and 452 surveys from 43 units in 13 hospitals that provided both types of data. Most indications observed were of HH (72.6%). Overall SP adherence was 64.4%. In descending order, adherence rates were PPE (81.8%), sharps handling (80.9%), linen handing (68.3%), and hand hygiene (58.3%). The aggregate of positive self-reported SP practices was 95.8%, and 77.3% rated unit environment for SP adherence positively. There was no correlation between observed adherence and reported adherence (r (41) = (−).024, P = .879). Conclusions: In this study, the largest study of SP adherence, observed practice was grossly suboptimal, particularly hand hygiene. Conversely, nurses on the same units rated adherence as high, despite the environment. In combination, both sources of surveillance data provide valuable and actionable insight to target interventions.Funding: and Disclosure Amanda Hessels reports that she is the principal investigator for the following studies: “Impact of Patient Safety Climate on Infection Prevention Practices and Healthcare Worker and Patient Outcomes” (grant no. DHHS/CDC/NIOSH 1K01OH011186 to Columbia University) and “Simulation to Improve Infection Prevention and Patient Safety: The SIPPS Trial” (AHRQ grant no. R18: 1R18HS026418 to Columbia University).


Health Scope ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seyed Bagher Mortazavi ◽  
Morteza Oostakhan ◽  
Amirabbas Mofidi ◽  
Aliakbar Babaei

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ferdinand O. Bohmann ◽  
Joachim Guenther ◽  
Katharina Gruber ◽  
Tanja Manser ◽  
Helmuth Steinmetz ◽  
...  

Background: Treatment of acute stroke is highly time-dependent and performed by a multiprofessional, interdisciplinary team. Interface problems are expectable and issues relevant to patient safety are omnipresent. The Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ) is a validated and widely used instrument to measure patient safety climate. The objective of this study was to evaluate the SAQ for the first time in the context of acute stroke care.Methods: A survey was carried out during the STREAM trial (NCT 032282) at seven university hospitals in Germany from October 2017 to October 2018. The anonymous survey included 33 questions (5-point Likert scale, 1 = disagree to 5 = agree) and addressed the entire multiprofessional stroke team. Statistical analyses were used to examine psychometric properties as well as descriptive findings.Results: 164 questionnaires were completed yielding a response rate of 66.4%. 67.7% of respondents were physicians and 25.0% were nurses. Confirmatory Factor Analysis revealed that the original 6-factor structure fits the data adequately. The SAQ for acute stroke care showed strong internal consistency (α = 0.88). Exploratory analysis revealed differences in scores on the SAQ dimensions when comparing physicians to nurses and when comparing physicians according to their duration of professional experience.Conclusion: The SAQ is a helpful and well-applicable tool to measure patient safety in acute stroke care. In comparison to other high-risk fields in medicine, patient safety climate in acute stroke care seems to be on a similar level with the potential for further improvements.Trial registration:www.ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT032282.


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