Abstract

BackgroundPatient safety culture is an important factor in determining hospitals’ ability to address and reduce the occurrence of adverse events (AEs). However, few studies have reported on the impact of nurses’ perceptions of patient safety culture on the occurrence of AEs. Our study aimed to assess the association between nurses’ perception of patient safety culture and their perceived proportion of adverse events.MethodsA cross-sectional survey was carried out among 2295 nurses employed in thirty-two teaching hospitals in Iran. Nurses completed the Persian version of the hospital survey of patients’ safety culture between October 2018 and September 2019.ResultsPositive Response Rates of overall patient safety culture was 34.1% and dimensions of patient safety culture varied from 20.9 to 43.8%. Also, nurses estimated that the occurrence of six adverse events varied from 51.2–63.0% in the past year. The higher nurses’ perceptions of “Staffing”, “Hospital handoffs and transitions”, “Frequency of event reporting”, “Non-punitive response to error”, “Supervisor expectation and actions promoting safety”, “Communication openness”, “Organizational learning continuous improvement”, “Teamwork within units”, and “Hospital management support patient safety” were significantly related to lower the perceived occurrence at least two out of six AEs (OR = 0.69 to 1.46).ConclusionsOur findings demonstrated that nurses’ perception regarding patient safety culture was low and the perceived occurrence of adverse events was high. The research has also shown that the higher level of nurses’ perception of patient safety culture was associated with lowered occurrence of AEs. Hence, managers could provide prerequisites to improve patient safety culture and reduce adverse events through different strategies, such as encouraging adverse events’ reporting and holding training courses for nurses. However, further research is needed to assess how interventions addressing patient safety culture might reduce the occurrence of adverse events.

Highlights

  • Patient safety culture is an important factor in determining hospitals’ ability to address and reduce the occurrence of adverse events (AEs)

  • We looked at the estimates of AEs at a nurse’s individual level

  • More than half of the nurses worked in general wards (56.8%)

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Summary

Introduction

Adverse events (AEs) have become one of the most serious threats for patient safety and quality of care in hospitals. The World Health Organization defines them as errors that occur during nursing care, which cause measurable injury or damage to patient, not related to the underlying disease [1]. Such events may involve errors of medication or equipment, delays in taking therapeutic choices, misdiagnosis, infection, loss of device, and others [2] which could have a negative impact on patients’ safety and quality of care. Even though there are many medical advances in treatment and diagnosis, AEs are still a huge problem for staff and patients because these treatments and diagnosis are often highly complex and can be affected by many different issues involving human error and hospital systems [2]

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