Abstract

This study is a descriptive study to investigate the influencing factors on the perception of Disclosure of Patient Safety Incidents among clinical nurses. A total of 206 clinical nurses were recruited from an online self-report questionnaire in hospitals with more than 400 beds. The results revealed that the scores of disclosure of patient safety incidents, patient safety culture, patient-centered care and ethical leadership of nurse managers were 97.41(±9.91), 3.79(±0.47), 68.17(±9.55) and 3.70(±0.83). The factors influencing on disclosure of patient safety incidents consist of patient safety development system of patient safety culture, the clinical context of patient-centered care, the patient safety priority order of Patient Safety culture, and work departments. These factors explained a total of 20% variance. In addition, it will be necessary to form a patient safety culture of a system improvement approach to patient safety incidents within medical institutions. Furthermore, it will be required to form a patient safety culture with a system improvement approach to patient safety incidents within medical institutions and active support at the nursing organization level to strengthen the patient-centered nursing competency of nurses.

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