1. Nurses' attitudes and barriers to incident reporting in Malta's acute general hospital.
- Author
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Ward, Corinne Scicluna and Mangion, Daniela
- Subjects
- *
NURSING audit , *HOSPITALS , *WORK experience (Employment) , *NURSES' attitudes , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *NURSE administrators , *RESEARCH methodology , *CROSS-sectional method , *MEDICAL incident reports , *QUANTITATIVE research , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *NURSES , *DATA analysis software , *PATIENT safety , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Although the science of patient safety has been developed and implemented widely, there remains a large gap in the understanding of the chain of events that lead to safety incidents, as well as their cost to patients, healthcare staff and the organisation as a whole. The aim of the study was to evaluate nurses' knowledge and awareness of the local incident reporting system at Malta's acute general hospital. A quantitative, descriptive cross-sectional design was used and data were collected from nurses through an online survey. A total of 323 questionnaires were received with a response rate of 23%. Various shortages within the local setting were identified, including lack of feedback and awareness of the system. Therefore, it is suggested that incident reporting should be given a higher profile on the organisation's agenda and incorporate employed members of staff rather than volunteers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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