Litcius/Paper detail

Patient safety culture, missed Nursing care and its reasons in Obstetrics

Silvana Cruz da Silva, Bruna Xavier Morais, Oclaris Lopes Munhoz, Juliana Dal Ongaro, Janete de Souza Urbanetto, Tânia Solange Bosi de Souza Magnago

2021Revista Latino-Americana de Enfermagem24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: to assess the correlations between the patient safety culture, the missed Nursing care, and the reasons for the omission in the obstetric area. METHOD: a cross-sectional study, conducted in 2019, with 62 Nursing professionals working in the obstetric area of a teaching hospital in southern Brazil. The MISSCARE-Brasil and Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture instruments were used. The data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, means comparison test and Spearman correlation. RESULTS: the overall mean of positive answers for the safety culture was 34.9 (± 17.4). The care of assessing the vital signs and monitoring capillary blood glucose were the most prioritized, with airway aspiration and oral hygiene being the most overlooked. The main reasons for the omissions refer to labor resources and to inadequate staffing. A significant and inversely proportional correlation was found between the patient safety culture and overlooked nursing care (r=-0.393). CONCLUSION: the safety culture of the obstetric area was assessed as fragile by the Nursing professionals. The more the safety culture is strengthened and the greater investment in labor and human resources, the less care is overlooked.

Topics & Concepts

StaffingPatient safetyNursingMedicineSafety cultureNursing careOrganizational cultureTest (biology)HygieneDescriptive statisticsFamily medicineHealth careEconomicsManagementMathematicsStatisticsPathologyBiologyEconomic growthPaleontologyPatient Safety and Medication ErrorsHospital Admissions and OutcomesSimulation-Based Education in Healthcare