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Published in: BMC Health Services Research 1/2010

Open Access 01-12-2010 | Research article

Patient safety culture lives in departments and wards: Multilevel partitioning of variance in patient safety culture

Authors: Ellen Deilkås, Dag Hofoss

Published in: BMC Health Services Research | Issue 1/2010

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Abstract

Background

Aim of study was to document 1) that patient safety culture scores vary considerably by hospital department and ward, and 2) that much of the variation is across the lowest level organizational units: the wards. Setting of study: 500-bed Norwegian university hospital, September-December 2006.

Methods

Data collected from 1400 staff by (the Norwegian version of) the generic version of the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ Short Form 2006). Multilevel analysis by MLwiN version 1.10.

Results

Considerable parts of the score variations were at the ward and department levels. More organization level variation was seen at the ward level than at the department level.

Conclusions

Patient safety culture improvement efforts should not be limited to all-hospital interventions or interventions aimed at entire departments, but include involvement at the ward level, selectively aimed at low-scoring wards. Patient safety culture should be studied as closely to the patient as possible. There may be such a thing as "hospital safety culture" and the variance across hospital departments indicates the existence of department safety cultures. However, neglecting the study of patient safety culture at the ward level will mask important local variations. Safety culture research and improvement should not stop at the lowest formal level of the hospital (wards, out-patient clinics, ERs), but proceed to collect and analyze data on the micro-units within them.
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Metadata
Title
Patient safety culture lives in departments and wards: Multilevel partitioning of variance in patient safety culture
Authors
Ellen Deilkås
Dag Hofoss
Publication date
01-12-2010
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Health Services Research / Issue 1/2010
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6963
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-10-85

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