Literature DB >> 27820722

A Multilevel Analysis of U.S. Hospital Patient Safety Culture Relationships With Perceptions of Voluntary Event Reporting.

Jonathan D Burlison1, Rebecca R Quillivan1, Lisa M Kath2, Yinmei Zhou3, Sam C Courtney2, Cheng Cheng3, James M Hoffman.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Patient safety events offer opportunities to improve patient care, but, unfortunately, events often go unreported. Although some barriers to event reporting can be reduced with electronic reporting systems, insight on organizational and cultural factors that influence reporting frequency may help hospitals increase reporting rates and improve patient safety. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the associations between dimensions of patient safety culture and perceived reporting practices of safety events of varying severity.
METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional survey study using previously collected data from The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Hospital Survey of Patient Safety Culture as predictors and outcome variables. The dataset included health-care professionals in U.S. hospitals, and data were analyzed using multilevel modeling techniques.
RESULTS: Data from 223,412 individuals, 7816 work areas/units, and 967 hospitals were analyzed. Whether examining near miss, no harm, or potential for harm safety events, the dimension feedback about error accounted for the most unique predictive variance in the outcome frequency of events reported. Other significantly associated variables included organizational learning, nonpunitive response to error, and teamwork within units (all P < 0.001). As the perceived severity of the safety event increased, more culture dimensions became significantly associated with voluntary reporting.
CONCLUSIONS: To increase the likelihood that a patient safety event will be voluntarily reported, our study suggests placing priority on improving event feedback mechanisms and communication of event-related improvements. Focusing efforts on these aspects may be more efficient than other forms of culture change.

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Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 27820722      PMCID: PMC5415419          DOI: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000000336

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Patient Saf        ISSN: 1549-8417            Impact factor:   2.243


  27 in total

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Authors:  P Pronovost; B Sexton
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3.  A new safety event reporting system improves physician reporting in the surgical intensive care unit.

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Authors:  Peter J Pronovost; Sean M Berenholtz; Christine A Goeschel; Dale M Needham; J Bryan Sexton; David A Thompson; Lisa H Lubomski; Jill A Marsteller; Martin A Makary; Elizabeth Hunt
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7.  Attitudes and barriers to incident reporting: a collaborative hospital study.

Authors:  S M Evans; J G Berry; B J Smith; A Esterman; P Selim; J O'Shaughnessy; M DeWit
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8.  Multilevel psychometric properties of the AHRQ hospital survey on patient safety culture.

Authors:  Joann S Sorra; Naomi Dyer
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2010-07-08       Impact factor: 2.655

9.  Barriers to incident reporting in a healthcare system.

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10.  Measuring patient safety culture in Taiwan using the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPSC).

Authors:  I-Chi Chen; Hung-Hui Li
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2010-06-07       Impact factor: 2.655

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Review 2.  Data Science Trends Relevant to Nursing Practice: A Rapid Review of the 2020 Literature.

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3.  Safety culture and adverse event reporting in Ghanaian healthcare facilities: Implications for patient safety.

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5.  Health research capacity of professional and technical personnel in a first-class tertiary hospital in northwest China: multilevel repeated measurement, 2013-2017, a pilot study.

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6.  Association between organizational citizenship behavior and patient safety culture from nurses' perspectives: a descriptive correlational study.

Authors:  Marzyeh Jafarpanah; Behrooz Rezaei
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7.  Patient safety culture among European cancer nurses-An exploratory, cross-sectional survey comparing data from Estonia, Germany, Netherlands, and United Kingdom.

Authors:  Lena Sharp; Kristi Rannus; Anna Olofsson; Daniel Kelly; Wendy H Oldenmenger
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  7 in total

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