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An Evaluation of Healthcare Safety Culture Among Healthcare Professionals in Secondary and Tertiary Public Hospitals in the Middle East Region

Background and aim The provision of quality healthcare is initiated by a culture of patient safety. Understanding the patient safety culture (PSC) is a critical concept for all healthcare workers. We conducted this study to evaluate the PSC understanding among the Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) sta...

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Autores principales: Abdulla, Moza A, Habas, Elmukhtar, Al Halabi, Anas, Hassan, Mohammed, Sohail, Farid, Alajmi, Jameela, Ghazouani, Hafedh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10039764/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36974259
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.35299
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author Abdulla, Moza A
Habas, Elmukhtar
Al Halabi, Anas
Hassan, Mohammed
Sohail, Farid
Alajmi, Jameela
Ghazouani, Hafedh
author_facet Abdulla, Moza A
Habas, Elmukhtar
Al Halabi, Anas
Hassan, Mohammed
Sohail, Farid
Alajmi, Jameela
Ghazouani, Hafedh
author_sort Abdulla, Moza A
collection PubMed
description Background and aim The provision of quality healthcare is initiated by a culture of patient safety. Understanding the patient safety culture (PSC) is a critical concept for all healthcare workers. We conducted this study to evaluate the PSC understanding among the Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) staff members. Furthermore, to establish a local (HMC) reference point for providing quality health care based on a culture of patient safety. Method A Hospital Patient Safety Culture Survey (HSOPSC) was presented to our health system employees to assess their perceptions and understandings of PSC. The survey was self-administered. STATA Package version 12.0 culture software was used to analyze these data in terms of descriptive, correlational, and multivariate ordinal regression. Results This study targeted to survey 6,538 employees in HMC facilities, but only 5,583 responded, resulting in a percentage response rate of 85.4%. Ten facilities achieved 100% participation, and other HMC facilities had response rates ranging from 71.2% to 97.5%. Approximately 88.0% of the responders had direct patient contact. The HSOPSC survey resulted in an overall positive response rate of 62.4%. The dimensions with the highest positive response score were “teamwork within the Unit” followed by “organizational learning/continuous improvement” and “management support for patient safety” with a mean percent positive response (PPR) of 83.1%, 82.0%, and 79.2%, respectively. Conversely, there are three dimensions with the lowest positive response score, including “communication openness,” “staffing,” and “nonpunitive response to errors,” with a mean PPR of 46.6%, 40.1%, and 27.7%, respectively. ANOVA and the student t-test revealed that men (64.3% ± 8.1%), employees with 11-15 years of experience in their specialty (65.8% ± 6.5%), and general hospital type (64.4% ±7.2%), were all significantly associated with differences in the overall perceptions of PSC. According to the study results, there was a moderate correlation between perceptions of PSC at the hospital and the following: Teamwork Across Units (RS= 0.43; p < 0.05), and Frequency of Events Reported (RS= 0.40; p < 0.05.). A regression analysis found that men, workers under 40 years of age, professionals with no direct contact with patients, employees with 11-15 years of experience in their specialty, intensive care staff, and general hospital staff were all significant predictors of overall favorable perceptions of the PSC. Conclusion PSC’s understanding of HMC staff is moderate. Furthermore, this is the first study conducted for PSC understanding by the HMC staff in Qatar State. It is eligible to be considered a backbone and reference for new research projects about PSC in Qatari health facilities, if not worldwide.
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spelling pubmed-100397642023-03-26 An Evaluation of Healthcare Safety Culture Among Healthcare Professionals in Secondary and Tertiary Public Hospitals in the Middle East Region Abdulla, Moza A Habas, Elmukhtar Al Halabi, Anas Hassan, Mohammed Sohail, Farid Alajmi, Jameela Ghazouani, Hafedh Cureus Medical Education Background and aim The provision of quality healthcare is initiated by a culture of patient safety. Understanding the patient safety culture (PSC) is a critical concept for all healthcare workers. We conducted this study to evaluate the PSC understanding among the Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) staff members. Furthermore, to establish a local (HMC) reference point for providing quality health care based on a culture of patient safety. Method A Hospital Patient Safety Culture Survey (HSOPSC) was presented to our health system employees to assess their perceptions and understandings of PSC. The survey was self-administered. STATA Package version 12.0 culture software was used to analyze these data in terms of descriptive, correlational, and multivariate ordinal regression. Results This study targeted to survey 6,538 employees in HMC facilities, but only 5,583 responded, resulting in a percentage response rate of 85.4%. Ten facilities achieved 100% participation, and other HMC facilities had response rates ranging from 71.2% to 97.5%. Approximately 88.0% of the responders had direct patient contact. The HSOPSC survey resulted in an overall positive response rate of 62.4%. The dimensions with the highest positive response score were “teamwork within the Unit” followed by “organizational learning/continuous improvement” and “management support for patient safety” with a mean percent positive response (PPR) of 83.1%, 82.0%, and 79.2%, respectively. Conversely, there are three dimensions with the lowest positive response score, including “communication openness,” “staffing,” and “nonpunitive response to errors,” with a mean PPR of 46.6%, 40.1%, and 27.7%, respectively. ANOVA and the student t-test revealed that men (64.3% ± 8.1%), employees with 11-15 years of experience in their specialty (65.8% ± 6.5%), and general hospital type (64.4% ±7.2%), were all significantly associated with differences in the overall perceptions of PSC. According to the study results, there was a moderate correlation between perceptions of PSC at the hospital and the following: Teamwork Across Units (RS= 0.43; p < 0.05), and Frequency of Events Reported (RS= 0.40; p < 0.05.). A regression analysis found that men, workers under 40 years of age, professionals with no direct contact with patients, employees with 11-15 years of experience in their specialty, intensive care staff, and general hospital staff were all significant predictors of overall favorable perceptions of the PSC. Conclusion PSC’s understanding of HMC staff is moderate. Furthermore, this is the first study conducted for PSC understanding by the HMC staff in Qatar State. It is eligible to be considered a backbone and reference for new research projects about PSC in Qatari health facilities, if not worldwide. Cureus 2023-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10039764/ /pubmed/36974259 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.35299 Text en Copyright © 2023, Abdulla et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Medical Education
Abdulla, Moza A
Habas, Elmukhtar
Al Halabi, Anas
Hassan, Mohammed
Sohail, Farid
Alajmi, Jameela
Ghazouani, Hafedh
An Evaluation of Healthcare Safety Culture Among Healthcare Professionals in Secondary and Tertiary Public Hospitals in the Middle East Region
title An Evaluation of Healthcare Safety Culture Among Healthcare Professionals in Secondary and Tertiary Public Hospitals in the Middle East Region
title_full An Evaluation of Healthcare Safety Culture Among Healthcare Professionals in Secondary and Tertiary Public Hospitals in the Middle East Region
title_fullStr An Evaluation of Healthcare Safety Culture Among Healthcare Professionals in Secondary and Tertiary Public Hospitals in the Middle East Region
title_full_unstemmed An Evaluation of Healthcare Safety Culture Among Healthcare Professionals in Secondary and Tertiary Public Hospitals in the Middle East Region
title_short An Evaluation of Healthcare Safety Culture Among Healthcare Professionals in Secondary and Tertiary Public Hospitals in the Middle East Region
title_sort evaluation of healthcare safety culture among healthcare professionals in secondary and tertiary public hospitals in the middle east region
topic Medical Education
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10039764/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36974259
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.35299
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