University of Texas Medical School, University of Texas, Memorial Hermann Center for Healthcare Quality and Safety, 6410 Fannin St., UTPB 1100.45, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
BMJ Qual Saf. 2012 Jun;21(6):490-8. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2011-000449. Epub 2012 Apr 11.
To examine the reliability and predictive validity of two patient safety culture surveys-Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ) and Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPS)-when administered to the same participants. Also to determine the ability to convert HSOPS scores to SAQ scores.
Employees working in intensive care units in 12 hospitals within a large hospital system in the southern United States were invited to anonymously complete both safety culture surveys electronically.
All safety culture dimensions from both surveys (with the exception of HSOPS's Staffing) had adequate levels of reliability. Three of HSOPS's outcomes-frequency of event reporting, overall perceptions of patient safety, and overall patient safety grade-were significantly correlated with SAQ and HSOPS dimensions of culture at the individual level, with correlations ranging from r=0.41 to 0.65 for the SAQ dimensions and from r=0.22 to 0.72 for the HSOPS dimensions. Neither the SAQ dimensions nor the HSOPS dimensions predicted the fourth HSOPS outcome-number of events reported within the last 12 months. Regression analyses indicated that HSOPS safety culture dimensions were the best predictors of frequency of event reporting and overall perceptions of patient safety while SAQ and HSOPS dimensions both predicted patient safety grade. Unit-level analyses were not conducted because indices did not indicate that aggregation was appropriate. Scores were converted between the surveys, although much variance remained unexplained.
Given that the SAQ and HSOPS had similar reliability and predictive validity, investigators and quality and safety leaders should consider survey length, content, sensitivity to change and the ability to benchmark when selecting a patient safety culture survey.
检验两个患者安全文化调查问卷(安全态度问卷[SAQ]和医院患者安全文化调查[HSOPS])在相同参与者中应用时的可靠性和预测效度,并确定将 HSOPS 分数转换为 SAQ 分数的能力。
邀请美国南部一个大型医院系统内 12 家医院的重症监护病房员工匿名在线填写这两种安全文化调查问卷。
除 HSOPS 的人员配备外,两种调查的所有安全文化维度均具有足够的可靠性。HSOPS 的 3 项结果(事件报告频率、对患者安全的总体看法和总体患者安全等级)与 SAQ 和 HSOPS 的文化维度在个体水平上显著相关,SAQ 维度的相关系数范围为 0.41 至 0.65,HSOPS 维度的相关系数范围为 0.22 至 0.72。SAQ 维度和 HSOPS 维度均不能预测第四个 HSOPS 结果——过去 12 个月内报告的事件数量。回归分析表明,HSOPS 安全文化维度是事件报告频率和对患者安全的总体看法的最佳预测指标,而 SAQ 和 HSOPS 维度均能预测患者安全等级。由于指标并未表明汇总合适,因此未进行单位水平的分析。两个调查之间转换了分数,但仍有大量差异无法解释。
鉴于 SAQ 和 HSOPS 具有相似的可靠性和预测效度,调查人员和质量与安全负责人在选择患者安全文化调查问卷时应考虑调查长度、内容、对变化的敏感性以及基准比较的能力。