Litcius/Paper detail

Patient safety culture: perception of nursing professionals in high complexity institutions

Desirée Zago Sanchis, Maria do Carmo Fernandez Lourenço Haddad, Edmarlon Girotto, Ana Maria Rigo Silva

2020Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: to analyze the perception of nursing professionals about patient safety culture in three highly complex hospital institutions. METHODS: descriptive and quantitative study with professionals working in care. The Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture questionnaire was applied, classifying its dimensions according to the percentage of positive responses (strengthened: ≥75.0%; potential for improvement: <75.0% to> 50.0%; weakened: ≤50.0%). RESULTS: four hundred sixty-seven professionals (79.6%), mostly women (88.4%), nursing technicians/assistants (57.2%), 20 to 39 years (60.8%), less than five years in the institution (57.8%) and exclusive bond (79.2%) participated in the study. Safety culture was considered fragile, seven dimensions assessed as such, highlighting "Openness to communication" and "Non-punitive responses to errors" with <30.0% positive responses. CONCLUSIONS: evidence of the need for discussion of the subject and strategies for change that promote quality and safety of care.

Topics & Concepts

Patient safetySafety cultureNursingOpenness to experiencePerceptionOrganizational cultureQuality (philosophy)Punitive damagesMedicineFamily medicinePsychologyHealth careSocial psychologyManagementPolitical sciencePhilosophyEpistemologyLawEconomic growthEconomicsNeurosciencePatient Safety and Medication ErrorsMedical Malpractice and Liability IssuesWorkplace Violence and Bullying