Abstract

AimsTo explore nurses' and midwives' perspectives of safety climate in Austrian hospitals as measurable elements of safety culture and to identify areas of quality improvement.BackgroundDue to close contact with patients, nurses and midwives play a vital role in ensuring patient safety.MethodAn online survey among 713 nurses and midwives was conducted, using the 19‐item Safety Climate Survey (SCS). To answer the survey, a 5‐point Likert scale was provided with higher ratings indicating a more positive safety climate.ResultsResults demonstrate a positive safety culture (MD 4.09, SD 0.53). Significant group differences in overall safety climate score could be found regarding nurses and midwives in managerial positions, between gender and participants age with low effect size. High item missing rates focus aspects on management/leadership, institutional concerns, leadership by physicians, and handling of adverse events. In addition, these items present the lowest ratings in safety climate.ConclusionResults indicate potentials for optimization in the areas of leadership communication and feedback, the handling of safety concerns, and visibility or improvement of patient safety strategies.Implications for Nursing ManagementA regular, standardized safety climate measurement can be a valuable tool for nurse managers and (political) decision‐makers to manage patient safety initiatives.

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