• BMJ quality & safety · Jan 2019

    Speaking up about patient safety concerns: the influence of safety management approaches and climate on nurses' willingness to speak up.

    • Carien W Alingh, van Wijngaarden Jeroen D H JDH Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands., Karina van de Voorde, Jaap Paauwe, and Robbert Huijsman.
    • Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
    • BMJ Qual Saf. 2019 Jan 1; 28 (1): 39-48.

    BackgroundSpeaking up is important for patient safety, but healthcare professionals often hesitate to voice their concerns. Direct supervisors have an important role in influencing speaking up. However, good insight into the relationship between managers' behaviour and employees' perceptions about whether speaking up is safe and worthwhile is still lacking.AimTo explore the relationships between control-based and commitment-based safety management, climate for safety, psychological safety and nurses' willingness to speak up.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional survey study, resulting in a sample of 980 nurses and 93 nurse managers working in Dutch clinical hospital wards. To test our hypotheses, hierarchical regression analyses (at ward level) and multilevel regression analyses were conducted.ResultsSignificantly positive associations were found between nurses' perceptions of control-based safety management and climate for safety (β=0.74; p<0.001), and between the perceived levels of commitment-based management and team psychological safety (β=0.36; p<0.01). Furthermore, team psychological safety is found to be positively related to nurses' speaking up attitudes (B=0.24; t=2.04; p<0.05). The relationship between nurse-rated commitment-based safety management and nurses' willingness to speak up is fully mediated by team psychological safety.ConclusionResults provide initial support that nurses who perceive higher levels of commitment-based safety management feel safer to take interpersonal risks and are more willing to speak up about patient safety concerns. Furthermore, nurses' perceptions of control-based safety management are found to be positively related to a climate for safety, although no association was found with speaking up. Both control-based and commitment-based management approaches seem to be relevant for managing patient safety, but when it comes to encouraging speaking up, a commitment-based safety management approach seems to be most valuable.© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2019. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.

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