Abstract

Reporting medication errors is crucial for improving quality of care and patient safety in acute care settings. To date, little is known about how reporting varies between early and mid-career nurses. Thus, this study used a cross-sectional, secondary data analysis design to investigate the differences between early (under the age of 35) and mid-career (ages 35–54) female nurses by examining their perceptions of patient safety culture using the Korean Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSPSC) and single-item self-report measure of medication error reporting. A total of 311 hospital nurses (260 early-career and 51 mid-career nurses) completed questionnaires on perceived patient safety culture and medication error reporting. Early-career nurses had lower levels of perception regarding patient safety culture (p = 0.034) compared to mid-career nurses. A multiple logistic regression analysis showed that relatively short clinical experience (<3 years) and a higher level of perceived patient safety culture increased the rate of appropriate medication error reporting among early-career nurses. However, there was no significant association between perception of patient safety culture and medication error reporting among mid-career nurses. Future studies should investigate the role of positive perception of patient safety culture on reporting errors considering multidimensional aspects, and include hospital contextual factors among early-, mid-, and late-career nurses.

Highlights

  • This is a secondary analysis of existing data of 311 nurses of a tertiary hospital collected from March to May 2015, to examine patient safety culture and adverse nursing outcomes [39]

  • The logistic regression identified total clinical career and patient safety culture scores as significant predictors of appropriate medication error reporting in early-career nurses

  • The findings of our study are similar to the findings of a previous study [44] where nurses with a higher perceived patient safety culture were more engaged in appropriate medication error reporting

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Summary

Introduction

Delivering safe care helps reduce adverse outcomes, such as longer hospital stays, high risk of mortality, and high medical costs in the care of patients [2,3,4]. In this regard, the significance of achieving a positive patient safety culture and patient safety has been continuously emphasized [5,6]. Establishing robust patient safety culture has been found to significantly reduce the number of medical errors reported in healthcare organizations, as well as rates of re-admission and infection [11,12,13]. Poor patient safety can affect the quality of medical care, error reporting [11,12,14]

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