Abstract
BackgroundAudits are increasingly used for patient safety governance purposes. However, there is little insight into the factors that hinder or stimulate effective governance based on auditing. The aim of this study is to quantify the factors that influence effective auditing for hospital boards and executives.MethodsA questionnaire of 32 factors was developed using influencing factors found in a qualitative study on effective auditing. Factors were divided into four categories. The questionnaire was sent to the board of directors, chief of medical staff, nursing officer, medical department head and director of the quality and safety department of 89 acute care hospitals in the Netherlands.ResultsWe approached 522 people, of whom 211 responded. Of the 32 factors in the questionnaire, 30 factors had an agreement percentage higher than 50%. Important factors per category were ‘audit as an improvement tool as well as a control tool’, ‘department is aware of audit purpose’, ‘quality of auditors’ and ‘learning culture at department’. We found 14 factors with a significant difference in agreement between stakeholders of at least 20%. Amongst these were ‘medical specialist on the audit team’, ‘soft signals in the audit report’, ‘patients as auditors’ and ‘post-audit support’.ConclusionWe found 30 factors for effective auditing, which we synthesised into eight recommendations to optimise audits. Hospitals can use these recommendations as a framework for audits that enable boards to become more in control of patient safety in their hospital.
Highlights
Audits are increasingly used for patient safety governance purposes
Findings from this study indicate that four central themes influence effective auditing; two themes consisting of factors related to the audit itself (Organisation and content of audits, and Competences and composition of audit team) and two themes regarding contextual factors (Board positioning of audits, and Cultural factors and attitudes towards auditing)
This study investigated the importance of factors that hinder or stimulate the effective use of audits by hospital boards and executives to govern patient safety
Summary
Audits are increasingly used for patient safety governance purposes. The aim of this study is to quantify the factors that influence effective auditing for hospital boards and executives. Hospital boards and executives are responsible for ensuring that healthcare is delivered in a safe manner in their hospitals [1, 2]. Healthcare incidents continue, suggesting that hospital boards are still not in control when it comes to assuring patient safety [4,5,6,7]. One of the instruments that hospital boards and executives can use for this purpose is auditing.
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