Abstract

BackgroundIn China, increasing attention has been devoted to the patient safety culture within health administrative departments and healthcare organizations. However, no official version of a patient safety culture assessment tool has been published or is widely used, and little is known about the status of the safety culture in Chinese hospitals. The aims of this study were to examine the reliability and validity of the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire in Chinese and to establish benchmark data on the safety culture in Beijing.MethodsAcross-sectional survey on patient safety culture was conducted from August to October 2014 using the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire in Chinese. Using a stratified random sampling method, we investigated departments from five integrative teaching hospitals in Beijing; frontline healthcare workers in each unit participated in the survey on a voluntary basis. The internal consistency and reliability were tested via Cronbach’s alpha, and the structural validity of the questionnaire was tested using a correlation analysis and confirmatory factor analysis. The patient safety culture in the five hospitals was assessed and analyzed.ResultsA total of 1663 valid questionnaires were returned, for a response rate of 87.9%. Cronbach’s alpha of the total scale was 0.945, and Cronbach’s alpha for the six dimensions ranged from 0.785 to 0.899. The goodness-of-fit indices in the confirmatory factor analysis showed an acceptable but not ideal model fit. The safety attitude score of healthcare workers in the five hospitals was 69.72, and the positive response rate was 38.57% overall. The positive response rates of the six dimensions were between 20.80% and 59.31%.ConclusionsThe Safety Attitudes Questionnaire in Chinese has good internal consistency, and the structural validity and reliability are acceptable. This questionnaire can be used to assess the safety culture in Beijing hospitals, but some items require further refinement. The patient safety culture in Beijing hospitals must be improved in certain key areas.

Highlights

  • In China, increasing attention has been devoted to the patient safety culture within health administrative departments and healthcare organizations

  • This study aims to test the applicability of the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ) in Chinese healthcare organizations in Beijing, to investigate the current status of the patient safety culture, to identify the advantages and disadvantages, and to provide basic information for the improvement of the patient safety culture in China

  • Survey instrument The SAQ was developed by the University of Texas [9]; 25% of the items are from the Flight Management Attitude Questionnaire (FMAQ) [22, 23], and 75% of the items pertain to healthcare industry characteristics [24, 25]

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Summary

Introduction

In China, increasing attention has been devoted to the patient safety culture within health administrative departments and healthcare organizations. China is in the beginning stages of establishing a patient safety culture. A patient safety event reporting system was established in hospitals as part of the risk management system by the China Hospital Association in 2007, and "Building a culture of patient safety" was proposed in 2014 as one of the top 10 patient safety goals. The National Health Administration Department has committed to improving medical quality and ensuring patient safety by launching various nationwide. Studies have shown that a positive safety culture can promote safety behavior among medical personnel, reduce the occurrence of adverse medical events, reduce the patient readmission rate, and decrease hospitalization time [5,6,7,8]

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