Wagner Laura M, McDonald Shawna M, Castle Nicholas G
New York University College of Nursing, Hartford Institute for Geriatric Nursing, New York City, NY, USA.
Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2012 May;38(5):207-15. doi: 10.1016/s1553-7250(12)38026-4.
Safety culture interventions in hospitals have been found to be associated with improved safety practices and outcomes. Studies in nursing homes generally report a poorly developed safety culture. Voluntary accreditation provides a structure for organizing care processes and is known to stimulate continuous quality improvement and thereby has the potential to stimulate improvements in organizational safety culture. The impact of Joint Commission accreditation on patient safety culture perceptions among senior managers in nursing homes in the United States was assessed.
A random sample of 6,000 nursing homes was selected from all 50 states. The Nursing Home Survey on Resident Safety Culture was sent to these facilities, and nursing home administrators and directors of nursing were instructed to complete the survey. Scores were computed using the instrument agreement scale, in which the percentage of positive responses represented the summary score. Students' paired sample t-tests were used to compare differences in scores between respondents from accredited nursing homes and those from nonaccredited nursing homes. Multivariate analyses were then used to examine the association between accreditation and each resident safety culture (RSC) subscale, controlling for facility and market characteristics.
The analytic response rate for the sample was 67%. After facility and market characteristics were controlled for, senior managers in accredited nursing homes rated 8 of the 11 RSC domains significantly higher.
Joint Commission accreditation appeared to be associated with a more favorable RSC in nursing homes. Assessing a nursing home's RSC is an organization's first step toward improving the culture of safety. These findings support the need for further discussion and facilitation of voluntary accreditation in nursing homes.
医院中的安全文化干预措施已被发现与改善安全实践及结果相关。养老院的研究普遍报告称安全文化发展不佳。自愿认证为组织护理流程提供了一种架构,并且已知能促进持续质量改进,从而有可能促进组织安全文化的改善。评估了联合委员会认证对美国养老院高级管理人员患者安全文化认知的影响。
从所有50个州中随机抽取6000家养老院作为样本。向这些机构发送了《养老院居民安全文化调查》,并指示养老院管理人员和护理主任完成该调查。使用工具一致性量表计算得分,其中肯定回答的百分比代表汇总得分。采用学生配对样本t检验来比较获得认证的养老院和未获得认证的养老院受访者得分的差异。然后进行多变量分析,以检验认证与每个居民安全文化(RSC)子量表之间的关联,并控制机构和市场特征。
样本的分析回复率为67%。在控制了机构和市场特征后,获得认证的养老院的高级管理人员对11个RSC领域中的8个领域的评分明显更高。
联合委员会认证似乎与养老院更有利的RSC相关。评估养老院的RSC是一个组织迈向改善安全文化的第一步。这些发现支持了在养老院进一步讨论和推动自愿认证的必要性。