College of Management, Yuan Ze University, TaoYuan, Taiwan.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2010 Jun 7;10:152. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-152.
Patient safety is a critical component to the quality of health care. As health care organizations endeavour to improve their quality of care, there is a growing recognition of the importance of establishing a culture of patient safety. In this research, the authors use the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPSC) questionnaire to assess the culture of patient safety in Taiwan and attempt to provide an explanation for some of the phenomena that are unique in Taiwan.
The authors used HSOPSC to measure the 12 dimensions of the patient safety culture from 42 hospitals in Taiwan. The survey received 788 respondents including physicians, nurses, and non-clinical staff. This study used SPSS 15.0 for Windows and Amos 7 software tools to perform the statistical analysis on the survey data, including descriptive statistics and confirmatory factor analysis of the structural equation model.
The overall average positive response rate for the 12 patient safety culture dimensions of the HSOPSC survey was 64%, slightly higher than the average positive response rate for the AHRQ data (61%). The results showed that hospital staff in Taiwan feel positively toward patient safety culture in their organization. The dimension that received the highest positive response rate was "Teamwork within units", similar to the results reported in the US. The dimension with the lowest percentage of positive responses was "Staffing". Statistical analysis showed discrepancies between Taiwan and the US in three dimensions, including "Feedback and communication about error", "Communication openness", and "Frequency of event reporting".
The HSOPSC measurement provides evidence for assessing patient safety culture in Taiwan. The results show that in general, hospital staffs in Taiwan feel positively toward patient safety culture within their organization. The existence of discrepancies between the US data and the Taiwanese data suggest that cultural uniqueness should be taken into consideration whenever safety culture measurement tools are applied in different cultural settings.
患者安全是医疗质量的关键组成部分。随着医疗机构努力提高医疗质量,越来越认识到建立患者安全文化的重要性。在这项研究中,作者使用医院患者安全文化调查(HSOPSC)问卷评估台湾的患者安全文化,并试图解释一些在台湾特有的现象。
作者使用 HSOPSC 从台湾的 42 家医院测量患者安全文化的 12 个维度。该调查收到了包括医生、护士和非临床人员在内的 788 名受访者的回复。本研究使用 SPSS 15.0 for Windows 和 Amos 7 软件工具对调查数据进行统计分析,包括描述性统计和结构方程模型的验证性因子分析。
HSOPSC 调查的 12 个患者安全文化维度的总体平均积极响应率为 64%,略高于 AHRQ 数据的平均积极响应率(61%)。结果表明,台湾医院工作人员对组织内的患者安全文化持积极态度。获得最高积极响应率的维度是“单位内部的团队合作”,与美国的报告结果相似。获得最低百分比积极响应的维度是“人员配备”。统计分析显示,台湾和美国在三个维度上存在差异,包括“关于错误的反馈和沟通”、“沟通开放性”和“事件报告频率”。
HSOPSC 测量为评估台湾的患者安全文化提供了证据。结果表明,总体而言,台湾医院工作人员对组织内的患者安全文化持积极态度。美国数据与台湾数据之间存在差异,这表明在不同文化背景下应用安全文化测量工具时,应考虑文化独特性。