Safety leadership: extending workplace safety climate best practices across health care workforces.

Deirdre McCaughey, Jonathon R B Halbesleben, Grant T Savage, Tony Simons, Gwen E McGhan
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引用次数: 20

Abstract

Purpose: Hospitals within the United States consistently have injury rates that are over twice the national employee injury rate. Hospital safety studies typically investigate care providers rather than support service employees. Compounding the lack of evidence for this understudied population is the scant evidence that is available to examine the relationship of support service employees'perceptions of safety and work-related injuries. To examine this phenomenon, the purpose of this study was to investigate support service employees' perceptions of safety leadership and social support as well as the relationship of safety perception to levels of reported injuries.

Design/methodology/approach: A nonexperimental survey was conducted with the data collected from hospital support service employees (n = 1,272) and examined. (1) relationships between safety leadership (supervisor and organization) and individual and unit safety perceptions; (2) the moderating effect of social support (supervisor and coworker) on individual and unit safety perceptions; and (3) the relationship of safety perception to reported injury rates. The survey items in this study were based on the items from the AHRQ Patient Safety Culture Survey and the U.S. National Health Care Surveys.

Findings: Safety leadership (supervisor and organization) was found to be positively related to individual safety perceptions and unit safety grade as was supervisor and coworker support. Coworker support was found to positively moderate the following relationships: supervisor safety leadership and safety perceptions, supervisor safety leadership and unit safety grade, and senior management safety leadership and safety perceptions. Positive employee safety perceptions were found to have a significant relationship with lower reported injury rates.

Value/originality: These findings suggest that safety leadership from supervisors and senior management as well as coworker support has positive implications for support service employees' perceptions of safety, which, in turn, are negatively related to lower odds of reporting injuries.

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安全领导:在卫生保健工作人员中推广工作场所安全气候最佳做法。
目的:美国医院的受伤率一直是全国雇员受伤率的两倍以上。医院安全研究通常调查的是护理人员,而不是服务人员。对这一未充分研究的人群缺乏证据的同时,也缺乏证据来检验支持服务员工的安全观念与工伤之间的关系。为了检验这一现象,本研究的目的是调查支持服务员工对安全领导和社会支持的感知,以及安全感知与报告伤害水平的关系。设计/方法/方法:采用从医院支持服务员工(n = 1,272)收集的数据进行非实验调查并进行检查。(1)安全领导(主管和组织)与个人和单位安全感知之间的关系;(2)社会支持(主管和同事)对个体和单位安全感知的调节作用;(3)安全感知与报告伤害率的关系。本研究的调查项目基于AHRQ患者安全文化调查和美国国家卫生保健调查的项目。研究发现:安全领导(主管和组织)与个人安全感知和单位安全等级呈正相关,主管和同事支持也是如此。研究发现,同事支持正向调节下列关系:主管安全领导与安全感知、主管安全领导与单位安全等级、高级管理人员安全领导与安全感知。积极的员工安全观念被发现与较低的报告伤害率有显著的关系。价值/独创性:这些发现表明,来自主管和高级管理人员的安全领导以及同事的支持对支持服务员工的安全观念有积极的影响,而这反过来又与较低的伤害报告率呈负相关。
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来源期刊
Advances in Health Care Management
Advances in Health Care Management Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
0.70
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0
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