1. The Relationship Between Safety Culture and Voluntary Event Reporting in a Large Regional Ambulatory Care Group
- Author
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Maura McGuire, Daniel Bitzel, Nina Miller, Margarete Ezinwa, Susan Schrock, Ting Yang, and Shelly Bhowmik
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Research Report ,Safety Management ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Leadership and Management ,MEDLINE ,Organizational culture ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ambulatory care ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Ambulatory Care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Operations management ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Safety culture ,Workplace ,Retrospective Studies ,Medical Errors ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Communication ,030503 health policy & services ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Retrospective cohort study ,Organizational Culture ,Family medicine ,Ambulatory ,Female ,Observational study ,Patient Safety ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
The safety culture in the workplace may affect event reporting. We evaluated the relationship of safety culture and voluntary event reporting within a large network of ambulatory practices, most of which provided primary care.This study was an observational, retrospective cohort study. Patient safety event reporting rates for 35 ambulatory practices were collected using a standard tool (UHC Patient Safety Net [PSN]) and normalized based on the number of patient visits in each practice. The overall and domain-specific safety culture of each practice was measured with a validated instrument (Safety Attitudes Questionnaire [SAQ]), distributed to 828 employees in 2013. We compared safety culture scores and the average event reporting rates during a 4-month window before and after the survey distribution. Poisson regression analyses were performed to determine the relationship between PSN reporting rates and SAQ results.The SAQ response rate was 87%. Practices varied widely in rates of reporting events, from 0.00 to 6.99 reports per 1000 total patient visits per month. Regression analyses indicated a positive association between PSN reporting rates and SAQ scores for the domains of overall culture (incidence rate ratio [IRR], 1.019; P = 0.004) and 4 safety culture domains: teamwork climate (IRR, 1.016; P = 0.019), safety climate (IRR, 1.018; P = 0.004), working conditions (IRR, 1.017; P = 0.006), and perceptions of local management (IRR, 1.016; P = 0.040).Our work provides new evidence to show that in the ambulatory setting more events and near misses are reported when there is a strong culture of safety.
- Published
- 2017
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