Litcius/Paper detail

Patient safety culture in home care service

Patrícia Conceição Oliveira, Odeony Paulo dos Santos, Edlaine Faria de Moura Villela, Patrícia de Sá Barros

2020Revista da Escola de Enfermagem da USP20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Verify perceptions of the health team about patient safety culture in home care in a large city in Brazilian Midwest region. METHOD: A survey study involving Safety Attitudes Questionnaire and professional profile inventory. Results: From the 37 professionals, most were female (n = 32, 86.5%), lived with their spouse (n = 25, 67.6%), worked in a statutory work regime (n = 29; 78.4%) and have only one job (n = 23; 62.2%). A higher median score for job satisfaction (80.0) and a lower score for management perception (31.8) were found. There was a negative correlation between weekly workload and teamwork (p = 0.02). Safety climate was significantly higher among consolidated (Consolidação das Leis do Trabalho - CLT) professionals in the safety climate (p = 0.001) and overall (p = 0.005) domains. Physicians had a higher perception of the safety climate domain when compared to professionals in other categories (p = 0.005). Age was positively associated to the climate in the safety (p = 0.002), working conditions (p = 0.03) and overall (p = 0.04) domains. CONCLUSION: Teamwork and job satisfaction were scored as positive and management actions were considered the main weakness of the safety culture.

Topics & Concepts

TeamworkSafety cultureWorkloadJob satisfactionSpousePatient safetySafety climateOrganizational cultureNursingPerceptionOccupational safety and healthMedicineFamily medicineHealth carePsychologyManagementSocial psychologyPublic relationsPolitical scienceNeurosciencePathologyLawEconomicsPatient Safety and Medication ErrorsOccupational Health and Safety ResearchHealth, Nursing, Elderly Care