埃及亚历山大大学妇产科医院工作人员患者安全文化评估

Hend Mostafa Ali Ali, Asmaa Mahmoud Abdul-Aziz, Eman Ahmed Fawzy Darwish, Manal Shfik Swelem, Eman Anwar Sultan
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引用次数: 4

摘要

背景:患者安全(PS)是医疗保健质量的基本组成部分。患者安全文化(PSC)评估为组织提供洞察其员工对患者安全的看法和态度。此外,这是为了提高绩效,而不是指责个人。本研究旨在从沙比大学妇产科医院医护人员的角度评估患者安全文化。方法:采用描述性横断面研究。该研究于2020年11月至2021年1月在沙特比大学妇产科医院进行。研究对象为实习期间的助理讲师、住院医师、护士长。符合纳入标准(数据收集期间负责且在医院工作3个月以上)的潜在参与者83人;12名参与初步研究的参与者被排除在外。在71名潜在参与者中,同意参与研究的参与者总数为66名参与者(38名住院医师,18名助理讲师和10名护士长),回复率为92.9%。采用医院患者安全文化调查问卷(HSOPSC)的结构化自我管理问卷格式,匿名分发给参与者。问卷共有42个项目,测量12个患者安全文化维度:单位内的团队合作、主管对促进患者安全的期望和行动、关于错误的反馈和沟通、组织学习、沟通开放性、对患者安全的总体感知、不干预和过渡、跨单位的团队合作、报告事件的频率、管理层对患者安全的支持、人员配备和管理层对患者安全的支持。除了以五点频率量表(从不,很少,有时,大部分时间,总是)回答的两个项目外,大多数患者安全文化问题都以五点同意量表(强烈不同意,不同意,中立,同意,强烈同意)回答,得分越高表明对患者安全的态度越有利。结果:总平均阳性率为45.4%。对个别项目的平均积极回应百分比从28.8%到81.8%不等。没有一个域的平均正确率超过75%。在HSOPSC问卷所包含的患者安全文化的12个维度中,“单位内团队合作”领域的平均阳性率最高(62.1%)。另一方面,“对错误的非惩罚性反应”领域得分最低(18.9%)。超过一半(57.6%)的参与者认为病人在医院的安全是可以接受的。结论:如果医院要提高整体绩效和服务质量,投资于加强患者安全的做法至关重要。目前的研究显示脆弱的病人安全培养(PSC)在大多数领域。所有这些领域都应被视为高度优先的重点领域,以进行评论和改革任务。有必要对工作人员进行持续的患者安全培训,以提高他们对安全文化的认识。所有PSC复合材料都需要改进,从定期评估PSC开始,同时持续监测并提高医疗保健提供者对所需PSC的认识。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Assessment of patient safety culture among the staff of the University Hospital for Gynecology and Obstetrics in Alexandria, Egypt.

Background: Patient safety (PS) is a fundamental component of healthcare quality. Patient Safety Culture (PSC) assessment provides an organization with insight of perceptions and attitudes of its staff related to patient safety. In addition, it is meant to improve performance rather than blaming individuals. This study aimed to assess patient safety culture from the health care staff perspective in El-Shatby University Hospital for Gynecology and Obstetrics.

Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted. The study was conducted at El-Shatby University Hospital for Gynecology and Obstetrics from November 2020 to January 2021. The target participants were assistant lecturers, residents, and head nurses in charge during the field study period. The number of potential participants who fulfilled the inclusion criteria (in charge during the period of data collection and working in the hospital for more than 3 months) was 83; the twelve participants who participated in the pilot study were excluded. The total number of participants who agreed to participate in the study was 66 participants (38 residents, 18 assistant lecturers, and 10 head nurses) out of 71 potential participants representing a 92.9% response rate. A structured self-administered questionnaire format adapted from Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPSC) questionnaire was distributed anonymously to the participants. The questionnaire has 42 items measuring twelve patient safety culture dimensions: teamwork within the unit, supervisors' expectations and actions to promote patient safety, feedback and communication about error, organizational learning, communication openness, overall perception of patient safety, hands-off and transitions, teamwork across units, frequency of events reported, management support for patient safety, staffing, and management support for patient safety. Except for two items that are responded on a five-point frequency scale (never, rarely, sometimes, most of the time, and always) the majority of patient safety culture questions are answered on a five-point agreement scale (strongly disagree, disagree, neutral, agree, and strongly agree), with a higher score indicating a more favorable attitude toward patient safety.

Results: The overall average positive percent score was 45.4%. Average positive response percentages to individual items ranged from 28.8 to 81.8%. No domain had an average positive percent score of more than 75%. Out of the twelve dimensions of patient safety culture included in the HSOPSC questionnaire, "the teamwork within unit" domain had the highest average positive percent score (62.1%) among all participants. On the other hand, the "Non-punitive response to error" domain had the lowest score (18.9%). More than half (57.6%) of the participants rated patient's safety at the hospital as acceptable.

Conclusion: Investing in practices that strengthen patient safety is crucial if the hospital is to improve overall performance and quality of services. The present study displays a frail patient safety culture (PSC) in the majority of the domains. All the domains should be considered of high priority focused areas for remark and reformative tasks. Continuous training programs of the staff on patient safety to improve their perception of safety culture are necessary. All PSC composites need improvement starting with regular assessment of PSC along with continuous monitoring and increasing the healthcare providers' awareness of demanded PSC.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.50
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0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal accepts papers of original research which are not being considered for publication elsewhere and which contribute to the advancement of knowledge of Public Health at large
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