Litcius/Paper detail

The Relationship Between Patient Safety Culture and the Intentions of the Nursing Staff to Report a Near-Miss Event During the COVID-19 Crisis

Nasra Idilbi, Mohanad Dokhi, Helena Malka-Zeevi, Sarit Rashkovits

2023Journal of Nursing Care Quality10 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Reporting a near-miss event has been associated with better patient safety culture. PURPOSE: To examine the relationship between patient safety culture and nurses' intention to report a near-miss event during COVID-19, and factors predicting that intention. METHODS: This mixed-methods study was conducted in a tertiary medical center during the fourth COVID-19 waves in 2020-2021 among 199 nurses working in COVID-19-dedicated departments. RESULTS: Mean perception of patient safety culture was low overall. Although 77.4% of nurses intended to report a near-miss event, only 20.1% actually did. Five factors predicted nurses' intention to report a near-miss event; the model explains 20% of the variance. Poor departmental organization can adversely affect the intention to report a near-miss event. CONCLUSIONS: Organizational learning, teamwork between hospital departments, transfers between departments, and departmental disorganization can affect intention to report a near-miss event and adversely affect patient safety culture during a health crisis.

Topics & Concepts

Affect (linguistics)Patient safetyNear missTeamworkCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Event (particle physics)Organizational cultureVariance (accounting)NursingPsychologyPerceptionSafety cultureMedicineMedical emergencyHealth careBusinessPublic relationsDiseasePhysicsEconomic growthCommunicationForensic engineeringManagementPolitical scienceEngineeringQuantum mechanicsLawPathologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)EconomicsAccountingNeurosciencePatient Safety and Medication ErrorsOccupational Health and Safety ResearchDisaster Response and Management