Abstract

The current knowledge about patient safety culture (PSC) in the healthcare industry, as well as the research tools that have been used to evaluate PSC in hospitals, is limited. Such a limitation may hamper current efforts to improve patient safety worldwide. This study provides a systematic review of published research on the perception of PSC in hospitals. The research methods used to survey and evaluate PSC in healthcare settings are also explored. A list of academic databases was searched from 2006 to 2020 to form a comprehensive view of PSC’s current applications. The following research instruments have been applied in the past to assess PSC: the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSPSC), the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ), the Patient Safety Climate in Health Care Organizations (PSCHO), the Modified Stanford Instrument (MSI-2006), and the Scottish Hospital Safety Questionnaire (SHSQ). Some of the most critical factors that impact the PSC are teamwork and organizational and behavioral learning. Reporting errors and safety awareness, gender and demographics, work experience, and staffing levels have also been identified as essential factors. Therefore, these factors will need to be considered in future work to improve PSC. Finally, the results reveal strong evidence of growing interest among individuals in the healthcare industry to assess hospitals’ general patient safety culture.

Highlights

  • Climate in Health Care Organizations (PSCHO), the Modified Stanford Instrument (MSI-2006), and the Scottish Hospital Safety Questionnaire (SHSQ)

  • The present study focuses on patient safety culture (PSC) in hospitals

  • The results demonstrate that hospital patient safety climate has a connection with readmission outcomes patients with AMI and HF

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Summary

Introduction

Climate in Health Care Organizations (PSCHO), the Modified Stanford Instrument (MSI-2006), and the Scottish Hospital Safety Questionnaire (SHSQ). Reporting errors and safety awareness, gender and demographics, work experience, and staffing levels have been identified as essential factors. These factors will need to be considered in future work to improve PSC. Unsafe medical practices can lead to patient injury, death, or disability [4] The proliferation of such incidents has led to the recognition of the need to improve patient safety culture (PSC). To ensure the highest level of safety culture in the healthcare industry, it is essential to understand the beliefs, attitudes, norms, and values of PS and its thresholds [7]. The PRISMA protocol contains 27 items that aim to analyze and report scientific evidence reliably [8]

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