College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, Nursing & Health Care School, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, Nursing & Health Care School, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
BMJ Open. 2020 Oct 14;10(10):e037875. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037875.
Patient safety, concerned with the prevention of harm to patients, has become a fundamental component of the global healthcare system. The evidence regarding the status of the patient safety culture in Arab countries in general shows that it is at a suboptimal level due to a punitive approach to errors and deficits in the openness of communications.
To identify factors contributing to the patient safety culture in Saudi Arabia.
Systematic review.
A systematic search was carried out in May 2018 in five electronic databases and updated in July 2020-MEDLINE, CINAHL, Embase, PsycINFO and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Relevant journals and reference lists of included studies were also hand-searched. Two independent reviewers verified that the studies met the inclusion criteria, assessed the quality of studies and extracted their relevant characteristics. The Yorkshire Contributory Factors Framework (YCFF) was used to categorise factors affecting safety culture in the included papers.
14 papers were included and the majority of studies were appraised as being of good quality. Strength and weakness factors that contribute to patient safety culture were identified. Ineffective leadership, a blame culture, workload/inadequate staffing and poor communication are reported as the main factors hindering a positive patient safety culture in Saudi Arabia. Conversely, 'strength' factors contributing to a positive patient safety culture included supportive organisational attitudes to learning/continuous improvement, good teamwork within units and support from hospital management for patient safety. There is an absence of patient perspectives regarding patient safety culture in Saudi Arabia.
Policymakers in the Saudi healthcare system should pay attention to the factors that may contribute to a positive patient safety culture, especially establishing a blame-free culture, improving communications and leadership capacity, learning from errors and involving patient perspectives in safety initiatives. Further research is required to understand in depth the barriers and facilitators to the implementation of a positive patient safety culture in Saudi Arabia.
患者安全是全球医疗体系的基本组成部分,其关注的是防止对患者造成伤害。一般来说,阿拉伯国家的患者安全文化状况的证据表明,由于对错误持惩罚态度以及沟通不够开放,其安全文化处于不理想的水平。
确定影响沙特阿拉伯患者安全文化的因素。
系统评价。
2018 年 5 月在五个电子数据库中进行了系统检索,并于 2020 年 7 月更新,包括 MEDLINE、CINAHL、Embase、PsycINFO 和 Cochrane 系统评价数据库。还对手动检索了相关期刊和纳入研究的参考文献列表。两名独立评审员验证了研究是否符合纳入标准、评估研究质量并提取相关特征。使用约克郡促成因素框架(YCFF)对纳入论文中影响安全文化的因素进行分类。
纳入了 14 篇论文,其中大多数研究被评为质量较好。确定了有助于患者安全文化的优势和劣势因素。报告称,无效的领导力、责备文化、工作量/人员配备不足和沟通不畅是阻碍沙特阿拉伯积极患者安全文化的主要因素。相反,有助于积极患者安全文化的“优势”因素包括对学习/持续改进的组织支持态度、单位内良好的团队合作以及医院管理层对患者安全的支持。沙特阿拉伯缺乏患者对患者安全文化的看法。
沙特医疗保健系统的政策制定者应关注可能有助于积极患者安全文化的因素,特别是建立无责文化、改善沟通和领导力、从错误中学习以及让患者参与安全举措。需要进一步研究,以深入了解在沙特阿拉伯实施积极患者安全文化的障碍和促进因素。