• Ir J Med Sci · Nov 2020

    Safety culture in a major accredited Irish university teaching hospital: a mixed methods study using the safety attitudes questionnaire.

    • Laura L Gleeson, Leanne Tobin, Gary L O'Brien, Erin K Crowley, Aoife Delaney, Denis O'Mahony, and Stephen Byrne.
    • Pharmaceutical Care Research Group, School of Pharmacy, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland. laura.gleeson@ucc.ie.
    • Ir J Med Sci. 2020 Nov 1; 189 (4): 1171-1178.

    BackgroundThe measurement of safety culture, the way in which members of an organisation think about and prioritise safety, in a hospital can provide valuable insight and inform quality improvement strategies.AimsThe aim of this study is to describe the safety culture of a university teaching hospital in the Republic of Ireland.MethodsThis is a mixed methods survey study using the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ). The SAQ was distributed to all staff in the study hospital. Staff attitudes towards six domains of patient safety culture were assessed over 32 Likert-scaled items. Thematic analysis was performed on qualitative data.ResultsA total of 768 staff members completed and returned a copy of the SAQ. The hospital scored above the international benchmark in five out of six domains, indicating a positive safety culture, but scored below the international benchmark in the domain 'Working Conditions'. This positive safety culture was not mirrored in the qualitative data, from which five themes emerged; three major-Staffing Issues, Patient-Focused Care and Hospital Environment-and two minor-Safe Reporting Culture and Training and Education.ConclusionsIn this study, a mixed methods approach was successfully used to investigate the safety culture in a large Irish hospital. Although the SAQ results indicated a positive safety culture, the qualitative data revealed a number of issues that the hospital staff felt impacted negatively on patient safety. The results of this study will inform future work on the design of an intervention to improve patient safety in the hospital.

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