Abstract

ABSTRACT Objective: to identify the safety culture dimensions that influence obstetric nurses’ clinical practice. Method: an observational, analytical and cross-sectional study, carried out from September 2018 to May 2019 at two maternity hospitals integrated in a hospital center in the Central region of Portugal. A total of 70 obstetric nurses answered the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture. The data were submitted to descriptive and inferential analysis. The dimensions were considered strong when they presented scores ≥ 75.0% of positive answers, and deemed as problematic with scores ≤ 50.0%. Results: the “Teamwork within units” dimension was the one that obtained scores above 75.0%. The “Supervisor expectations”, “Feedback and communication about errors”, “Communication openness”, “Organizational learning” and “Hospital handoffs and transitions” dimensions obtained scores between 50.0% and 65.0%. The “Non-punitive response to error”, “Frequency of events reported”, “Management support for patient safety” and “Staffing” dimensions had scores below 40.0%. Conclusion: the results of this study show that “Teamwork within units” is a strong safety culture dimension in maternity hospitals. However, the prevalence of a punitive culture, underreporting of adverse events, insufficient number of obstetrical nurses and little commitment of the hospital management are considered as problematic dimensions that influence obstetric nurses' practice. This assessment of the safety culture contributes to planning interventions that reduce the incidence of errors and improve the safety of obstetric care.

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