| Literature DB >> 20109186 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPS) is used to assess safety culture in many countries. Accordingly, the questionnaire has been translated into Turkish for the study of patient safety culture in Turkish hospitals. The aim of this study is threefold: to determine the validity and reliability of the translated form of HSOPS, to evaluate physicians' and nurses' perceptions of patient safety in Turkish public hospitals, and to compare finding with U.S. hospital settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20109186 PMCID: PMC2835702 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-28
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
The demographic and professional characteristics of the participants
| Doctors | R. Nurses | Temp. Nurses | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 71 | 69,6 | 2 | 1,5 | 28 | 38,9 |
| Female | 31 | 30,4 | 133 | 98,5 | 44 | 61,1 |
| Unmarried | 27 | 25,7 | 38 | 28,1 | 36 | 50,0 |
| Married | 73 | 72,3 | 94 | 69,6 | 34 | 47,2 |
| Widowed/divorced | 2 | 2,0 | 3 | 2,2 | 2 | 2,8 |
| General public | 25 | 24,5 | 55 | 40,7 | 13 | 18,1 |
| Teaching | 17 | 16,7 | 38 | 28,1 | 29 | 40,3 |
| University | 60 | 58,8 | 42 | 31,1 | 30 | 41,7 |
| Medicine | 48 | 47,1 | 66 | 48,9 | 30 | 41,7 |
| Surgery | 25 | 24,5 | 38 | 28,1 | 21 | 29,2 |
| Emergency/ICU/OR* | 29 | 28,4 | 31 | 23,0 | 21 | 29,2 |
| Less than 5 year | 29 | 28,4 | 32 | 24,4 | 39 | 54,9 |
| 5 to 9 years | 27 | 26,5 | 33 | 25,2 | 10 | 14,1 |
| 10 to 14 years | 15 | 14,7 | 34 | 26,0 | 12 | 116,9 |
| 15 years or more | 31 | 30,4 | 32 | 24,4 | 10 | 14,1 |
| Less than 1 year | 19 | 18,6 | 23 | 17,2 | 28 | 38,9 |
| 1 to 4 years | 42 | 41,2 | 45 | 33,6 | 29 | 40,3 |
| 5 to 9 years | 22 | 21,6 | 21 | 15,7 | 6 | 8,3 |
| 10 years or more | 19 | 18,6 | 45 | 33,6 | 9 | 12,5 |
*ICU: Intensive Care Unit, OR: Operating Room
Factor loadings of the items regarding patient safety culture
| Items | F1 | F2 | F3 | F4 | F5 | F6 | F7 | F8 | F9 | F10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| We are informed about errors that happen in this unit | ||||||||||
| Staff feel free to question the decisions or actions of those with more authority | ||||||||||
| Staff will freely speak up if they see something that may negatively affect patient care | ||||||||||
| Staff are afraid to ask questions when something does not seem right | ||||||||||
| We are given feedback about changes put into place based on event reports | ||||||||||
| In this unit, we discuss ways to prevent errors from happening again | ||||||||||
| Shift changes are problematic for patients in this hospital | ||||||||||
| Important patient care information is often lost during shift changes | ||||||||||
| Things fall between the cracks when transferring patients from one unit to another | ||||||||||
| It is often unpleasant to work with staff from other hospital units | ||||||||||
| Problems often occur in the exchange of information across hospital units | ||||||||||
| Staff in this unit work longer hours than is best for patient care | ||||||||||
| After we make changes to improve patient safety, we evaluate their effectiveness | ||||||||||
| We are actively doing things to improve patient safety | ||||||||||
| People support one another in this unit | ||||||||||
| In this unit, people treat each other with respect | ||||||||||
| When one area in this unit gets really busy, others help out | ||||||||||
| When a lot of work needs to be done quickly, we work together as a team to get the work done | ||||||||||
| Hospital management provides a work climate that promotes patient safety | ||||||||||
| Hospital units do not coordinate well with each other | ||||||||||
| There is good cooperation among hospital units that need to work together | ||||||||||
| The actions of hospital management show that patient safety is a top priority | ||||||||||
| Hospital units work well together to provide the best care for patients | ||||||||||
| Hospital management seems interested in patient safety only after an adverse event happens | ||||||||||
| Mistakes have led to positive changes here | ||||||||||
| When an event is reported, it feels like the person is being written up, not the problem | ||||||||||
| Staff feel like their mistakes are held against them | ||||||||||
| Staff worry that mistakes they make are kept in their personnel file | ||||||||||
| We use more agency/temporary staff than is best for patient care | ||||||||||
| We have enough staff to handle the workload | ||||||||||
| We work in crisis mode, trying to do too much, too quickly | ||||||||||
| Our procedures and systems are good at preventing errors from happening | ||||||||||
| It is just by chance that more serious mistakes don't happen around here | ||||||||||
| Patient safety is never sacrificed to get more work done | ||||||||||
| We have patient safety problems in this unit | ||||||||||
| When a mistake is made, but has no potential to harm the patient, how often is this reported? | ||||||||||
| When a mistake is made, but is caught and corrected before affecting the patient, how often is this reported? | ||||||||||
| When a mistake is made that could harm the patient, but does not, how often is this reported? | ||||||||||
| My supervisor/manager seriously considers staff suggestions for improving patient safety | ||||||||||
| My supervisor/manager says a good word when he/she sees a job done according to established patient safety procedures | ||||||||||
| My supervisor/manager overlooks patient safety problems that happen over and over | ||||||||||
| Whenever pressure builds up, my supervisor/manager wants us to work faster, even if it means taking shortcuts |
Inter-correlations of the 10 factors
| Factor | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0,306** | |||||||||
| 0,335** | 0,462** | ||||||||
| 0,247** | 0,289** | 0,329** | |||||||
| 0,387** | 0,344** | 0,408** | 0,358** | ||||||
| 0,382** | 0,507** | 0,517** | 0,355** | 0,441** | |||||
| 0,132* | 0,207** | 0,315** | 0,289** | 0,217** | 0,358** | ||||
| 0,043 | 0,098 | 0,114 | 0,058 | 0,166** | 0,056 | -0,032 | |||
| 0,323** | 0,314** | 0,532** | 0,185** | 0,353** | 0,427** | 0,280** | 0,04 | ||
| 0,058 | 0,256** | 0,283** | 0,158** | 0,193** | 0,288** | 0,122* | 0,159** | 0,225** |
*p < 0.05 **p < 0.01.
Descriptive statistics of survey on patient safety culture and benchmark scores
| Ten factors subscales and survey items | Score | Benchmark score |
|---|---|---|
| a. People support one another between units | 65(6) | 81* |
| b. When a lot of work needs to be done quickly, we work together as a team to get the work done | 75(5) | 81* |
| c. In all units, people treat each other with respect | 72(3) | 73 |
| d. When one area in this unit gets really busy, others help out | 70(9) | 63 |
| a. Management says a good word when he/she sees a job done according to established resident safety procedures | 37(5) | 68* |
| b. Management seriously considers staff suggestions for improving resident safety | 41(7) | 72* |
| c. Whenever pressure builds up, my manager wants us to work faster, even if it means taking shortcuts (R) | 37(5) | 67* |
| d. My manager overlooks resident safety problems that happen over and over (R) | 60(8) | 71* |
| a. Management provides a work climate that promotes resident safety | 40(12)†‡ | 72* |
| b. The actions of management show that resident safety is a top priority | 37(6)‡ | 65* |
| c. Management seems interested in resident safety only after an adverse event happens | 32(4) | 50* |
| d. There is good cooperation among units that need to work together | 46(12) | 34 |
| e. Units work well together to provide the best care for residents | 40(6) | 47 |
| f. Units do not coordinate well with each other (R) | 57(2) | 51* |
| a. We are actively doing things to improve resident safety | 51(5)‡ | 77* |
| b. Staff in this facility work longer hours than is best for resident care | 21(4) | 48* |
| c. After we make changes to improve resident safety, we evaluate their effectiveness | 52(7) | 62* |
| a. Resident safety is never sacrificed to get more work done | 67(7)† | 53* |
| b. Our procedures and systems are good at preventing errors from happening | 67(11) | 55 |
| c. It is just by chance that more serious mistakes don't happen around here | 57(5) | 52 |
| d. We have patient safety problems in this facility (R) | 57(5) | 64* |
| a. We are given feedback about changes put into place based on event reports | 30(4) | 53* |
| b. We are informed about errors that happen in the units | 47(9) | 59* |
| c. In this facility, we discuss ways to prevent errors from happening again | 42(6) | 65* |
| a. Staff will freely speak up if they see something that may negatively affect resident care | 43(1)† | 72* |
| b. Staff feel free to question the decisions or actions of those with more authority | 19(3) | 46* |
| c. Staff are afraid to ask questions when something does not seem right (R) | 47(4) | 60* |
| a. When a mistake is made, but is caught and corrected before affecting the resident, how often is this reported? | 13(2) | 47* |
| b. When a mistake is made, but has no potential to harm the resident, how often is this reported? | 14(3) | 50* |
| c. When a mistake is made that could harm the resident, but does not, how often is this reported? | 18(4) | 67* |
| a. We have enough staff to handle the workload | 36(19)† | 45 |
| c. We use more agency/temporary staff than is best for resident care | 76(9) | 61* |
| d. We work in "crisis mode" trying to do too much, too quickly (R) | 21(4) | 40* |
| a. Things "fall between the cracks" when transferring residents from one unit to another (R) | 44(6) | 29* |
| b. Important resident care information is often lost during shift changes (R) | 59(3) | 44* |
| c. Problems often occur in the exchange of information across units (R) | 42(5) | 32* |
| d. It is often unpleasant to work with staff from other units (R) | 46(7) | 56* |
| e. Shift changes are problematic for residents in this facility (R) | 67(1) | 36* |
| a. Staff feel like their mistakes are held against them (R) | 14(1) | 44* |
| b. When an event is reported, it feels like the person is being written up, not the problem (R) | 19(1) | 39* |
| c. Mistakes have led to positive changes here | 42(11) | 58* |
| d. Staff worry that mistakes they make are kept in their personnel file (R) | 23(4) | 28* |
R = item was reverse coded
*Significantly different t test at p,0.05 (using same SD for both data)
† Lover in university hospital to general and teaching hospital (p < 0.001)
‡ Lower in physicians to nurses (p < 0.05)
§Lower in staff working in Emergency/ICU/OR (p < 0.05)
# Lower in staff working 50 hour or more per week (p < 0.05)