Abstract

Patient safety is essential for the reliable delivery of health care. One way to positively influence patient safety is to improve the safety and teamwork climate of a clinical area. Research shows that patient safety WalkRounds (WRs) are an appropriate and common method to improve safety culture. The aim of this study was to combine WRs with observations of specific patient safety dimensions and to measure the safety and teamwork climate. In this observational study, WRs took place in eight work settings across a 770-bed university hospital in Switzerland. During rounds, health care workers (HCWs) were observed in relation to defined patient safety dimensions. In addition, HCWs were surveyed using safety and teamwork climate scales before the initial WRs and six to nine months later, and implementation of planned improvement actions following the WRs was evaluated. During WRs, 810 activities of HCWs were observed, of which 85.4% met the requirements for safe care. Safety and teamwork climate did not change significantly after nine months. A total of 36 action plan items were planned to address safety deficits that surfaced during WRs, but only 40.7% of the action items had been implemented after nine months. WRs with structured in-person observations identified safe care practices and deficits in patient safety. Improvement action plans to address safety deficits were not fully implemented nine months later, and there were no significant changes in the safety and teamwork climate at that time.

Full Text
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