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Iranian Nurses’ Perception of Patient Safety Culture

BACKGROUND: In recent decades, patient safety has become a high priority health system issue, due to the high potential of occurring adverse events in health facilities. OBJECTIVES: This study was aimed to survey patient safety culture in 2 Iranian educational hospitals. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In a...

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Autores principales: Bahrami, Mohammad Amin, Chalak, Mahjabin, Montazeralfaraj, Razieh, Dehghani Tafti, Arefeh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Kowsar 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4028756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24910783
http://dx.doi.org/10.5812/ircmj.11894
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author Bahrami, Mohammad Amin
Chalak, Mahjabin
Montazeralfaraj, Razieh
Dehghani Tafti, Arefeh
author_facet Bahrami, Mohammad Amin
Chalak, Mahjabin
Montazeralfaraj, Razieh
Dehghani Tafti, Arefeh
author_sort Bahrami, Mohammad Amin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In recent decades, patient safety has become a high priority health system issue, due to the high potential of occurring adverse events in health facilities. OBJECTIVES: This study was aimed to survey patient safety culture in 2 Iranian educational hospitals. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In a descriptive, cross-sectional survey, a hospital survey on patient safety culture, was used in two teaching hospitals in Yazd, Iran during 2012. Study population was comprised of the same hospitals' nurses. Stratified-random sampling method was used and distributed among a total of 340 randomly-selected nurses from different units. From all distributed questionnaires, 302 ones were answered completely and afterwards analyzed using SPSS 17. Dimensional- and item-level positive scores were used for results reporting. Additionally descriptive statistics (mean and standard deviation), independent sample t-test and ANOVA were sued for data analyzing. RESULTS: Research findings demonstrated that both hospitals had low to average scores in all dimensions of patient safety culture. Non-punitive response to error, staffing and frequency of events reported had the lowest positive scores of patient safety dimensions with scores 15.26, 19.26, 16.65, 30 and 32.87, 31.10 respectively in Shahid Sadoughi and Shahid Rahnemoon Hospitals. Also only 29.20 and 28.80 percent of nurses in Shahid Sadoughi and Shahid Rahnemoon Hospitals, respectively, evaluated the patient safety grade of their hospital as “excellent” and “very good”. Indeed, the studied hospitals had a statistical difference in 3 dimensions of patient safety culture (frequency of events reported, organizational learning and staffing). (P ≤ 0.05) CONCLUSIONS: Our study results were indicating of the challenge of weak patient safety culture, in educational hospitals. Therefore, the issue should be integrated to all policy makers and managerial initiatives in our health system, as a top priority.
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spelling pubmed-40287562014-06-06 Iranian Nurses’ Perception of Patient Safety Culture Bahrami, Mohammad Amin Chalak, Mahjabin Montazeralfaraj, Razieh Dehghani Tafti, Arefeh Iran Red Crescent Med J Research Article BACKGROUND: In recent decades, patient safety has become a high priority health system issue, due to the high potential of occurring adverse events in health facilities. OBJECTIVES: This study was aimed to survey patient safety culture in 2 Iranian educational hospitals. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In a descriptive, cross-sectional survey, a hospital survey on patient safety culture, was used in two teaching hospitals in Yazd, Iran during 2012. Study population was comprised of the same hospitals' nurses. Stratified-random sampling method was used and distributed among a total of 340 randomly-selected nurses from different units. From all distributed questionnaires, 302 ones were answered completely and afterwards analyzed using SPSS 17. Dimensional- and item-level positive scores were used for results reporting. Additionally descriptive statistics (mean and standard deviation), independent sample t-test and ANOVA were sued for data analyzing. RESULTS: Research findings demonstrated that both hospitals had low to average scores in all dimensions of patient safety culture. Non-punitive response to error, staffing and frequency of events reported had the lowest positive scores of patient safety dimensions with scores 15.26, 19.26, 16.65, 30 and 32.87, 31.10 respectively in Shahid Sadoughi and Shahid Rahnemoon Hospitals. Also only 29.20 and 28.80 percent of nurses in Shahid Sadoughi and Shahid Rahnemoon Hospitals, respectively, evaluated the patient safety grade of their hospital as “excellent” and “very good”. Indeed, the studied hospitals had a statistical difference in 3 dimensions of patient safety culture (frequency of events reported, organizational learning and staffing). (P ≤ 0.05) CONCLUSIONS: Our study results were indicating of the challenge of weak patient safety culture, in educational hospitals. Therefore, the issue should be integrated to all policy makers and managerial initiatives in our health system, as a top priority. Kowsar 2014-04-05 2014-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4028756/ /pubmed/24910783 http://dx.doi.org/10.5812/ircmj.11894 Text en Copyright © 2014, Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal; Published by Kowsar Corp. http://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 work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bahrami, Mohammad Amin
Chalak, Mahjabin
Montazeralfaraj, Razieh
Dehghani Tafti, Arefeh
Iranian Nurses’ Perception of Patient Safety Culture
title Iranian Nurses’ Perception of Patient Safety Culture
title_full Iranian Nurses’ Perception of Patient Safety Culture
title_fullStr Iranian Nurses’ Perception of Patient Safety Culture
title_full_unstemmed Iranian Nurses’ Perception of Patient Safety Culture
title_short Iranian Nurses’ Perception of Patient Safety Culture
title_sort iranian nurses’ perception of patient safety culture
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4028756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24910783
http://dx.doi.org/10.5812/ircmj.11894
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