Verbakel Natasha J, Langelaan Maaike, Verheij Theo J M, Wagner Cordula, Zwart Dorien L M
From the *Department of General Practice, Julius Center for Health Sciences and Primary Care, University Medical Center Utrecht; †Nivel, Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research, Utrecht; and ‡EMGO+ Institute, Department of Public and Occupational Health, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Patient Saf. 2016 Sep;12(3):152-8. doi: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000000075.
Patient safety culture, described as shared values, attitudes and behavior of staff in a health-care organization, gained attention as a subject of study as it is believed to be related to the impact of patient safety improvements. However, in primary care, it is yet unknown, which effect interventions have on the safety culture.
To review literature on the use of interventions that effect patient safety culture in primary care.
Searches were performed in PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, and PsychINFO on March 4, 2013. Terms defining safety culture were combined with terms identifying intervention and terms indicating primary care. Inclusion followed if the intervention effected patient safety culture, and effect measures were reported.
The search yielded 214 articles from which two were eligible for inclusion. Both studies were heterogeneous in their interventions and outcome; we present a qualitative summary. One study described the implementation of an electronic medical record system in general practices as part of patient safety improvements. The other study facilitated 2 workshops for general practices, one on risk management and another on significant event audit. Results showed signs of improvement, but the level of evidence was low because of the design and methodological problems.
These studies in general practice provide a first understanding of improvement strategies and their effect in primary care. As the level of evidence was low, no clear preference can be determined. Further research is needed to help practices make an informed choice for an intervention.
患者安全文化被描述为医疗机构中工作人员共同的价值观、态度和行为,由于人们认为它与患者安全改善的影响相关,因此作为一个研究主题受到关注。然而,在初级保健中,干预措施对安全文化有何种影响尚不清楚。
回顾关于在初级保健中影响患者安全文化的干预措施应用的文献。
于2013年3月4日在PubMed、EMBASE、CINAHL和PsychINFO数据库中进行检索。定义安全文化的术语与识别干预措施的术语以及表明初级保健的术语相结合。如果干预措施影响了患者安全文化且报告了效果测量指标,则纳入研究。
检索得到214篇文章,其中两篇符合纳入标准。两项研究在干预措施和结果方面均存在异质性;我们进行了定性总结。一项研究将在全科医疗中实施电子病历系统描述为患者安全改善的一部分。另一项研究为全科医疗举办了2次研讨会,一次是关于风险管理,另一次是关于重大事件审计。结果显示有改善迹象,但由于设计和方法问题,证据水平较低。
这些全科医疗研究初步了解了初级保健中的改善策略及其效果。由于证据水平较低,无法确定明确的偏好。需要进一步研究以帮助医疗机构为干预措施做出明智选择。