Chiang Hui-Ying, Lin Shu-Yuan, Hsiao Ya-Chu, Chang Yuanmay
Nursing Department, Chi Mei Medical Center, Tainan, Taiwan, Republic of China.
J Nurs Care Qual. 2012 Oct-Dec;27(4):359-67. doi: 10.1097/NCQ.0b013e31825ba89e.
This study explored the effects of incident reporting culture and willingness of incident reporting on behavioral involvement in patient safety (BIPS) by surveying 1049 hospital nurses in Taiwan. The highest areas of BIPS were handoff communication and discussion on error prevention. Yet, sharing information about human factors toward safety awareness was less frequent. Results indicated that the reporting culture, willingness to report, tenure of work, and reporting rate contributed positively to BIPS.
本研究通过对台湾1049名医院护士进行调查,探讨了事件报告文化和事件报告意愿对患者安全行为参与度(BIPS)的影响。BIPS最高的领域是交接班沟通和预防错误的讨论。然而,就人为因素对安全意识分享信息的情况则较少见。结果表明,报告文化、报告意愿、工作年限和报告率对BIPS有积极贡献。