Claesen Marlies, Punnewaert Evelyne, Malfait Simon, Eeckloo Kristof, Van Hecke Ann, Schrooten Ward
Faculty of Medicine and Life Sciences, Hasselt University, Diepenbeek, Belgium
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University, Gent, Belgium.
BMJ Open Qual. 2025 May 12;14(2):e003200. doi: 10.1136/bmjoq-2024-003200.
Patient participation and safety are pivotal in healthcare quality, internationally acknowledged for enhancing health services. This study examines the correlation between two assessment tools, the Patient Participation Culture Tool (PACT) and the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSPSC), using retrospective data from 2014 to 2021 METHOD: For the main analysis, dimensional scores of the HSPSC and domain scores of the PACT were aggregated according to hospital and specific wards. In a second step, we used aggregated scores by hospital and profession. Descriptive statistics outlined the sociodemographic characteristics of participants. Spearman's rank correlation coefficient was employed to evaluate relationships between continuous variables represented by PACT domain and HSPSC dimensional scores among study participants.
Data from 17 hospitals were analysed. The participants were distributed across 43 wards, and a match based on staff positions resulted in 37 different groups, predominantly comprised of nurses (>89%). At ward level, five PACT domains correlated significantly with ten different HSPSC dimensions (p<0.05), while a significant correlation was found between four PACT domains and seven HSPSC dimensions based on function. The correlation graphs demonstrate strong internal coherence within safety and participation culture measurements, highlighting the distinctiveness and validity of each questionnaire in capturing intricacies within patient safety and participation culture, supporting their construct validity.
This study compared the PACT and the HSPSC, revealing their connections and unique features. Using Spearman's correlation, it positively linked patient participation and safety culture, finding significant correlations, mainly moderate, between their specific aspects. It highlighted how patient involvement positively influences safety practices in healthcare, valuable for enhancing overall quality.
患者参与和安全是医疗质量的关键因素,在国际上被公认为对改善医疗服务具有重要意义。本研究利用2014年至2021年的回顾性数据,考察了两种评估工具——患者参与文化工具(PACT)和医院患者安全文化调查(HSPSC)之间的相关性。
在主要分析中,根据医院和特定病房汇总HSPSC的维度得分和PACT的领域得分。第二步,我们使用了按医院和专业汇总的得分。描述性统计概述了参与者的社会人口特征。采用斯皮尔曼等级相关系数来评估研究参与者中由PACT领域和HSPSC维度得分表示的连续变量之间的关系。
分析了来自17家医院的数据。参与者分布在43个病房,根据员工职位进行匹配后形成了37个不同的组,主要由护士组成(>89%)。在病房层面,五个PACT领域与十个不同的HSPSC维度显著相关(p<0.05),而基于功能的四个PACT领域与七个HSPSC维度之间存在显著相关性。相关图显示了安全和参与文化测量内部的强一致性,突出了每份问卷在捕捉患者安全和参与文化复杂性方面的独特性和有效性,并支持其结构效度。
本研究比较了PACT和HSPSC,揭示了它们之间的联系和独特特征。通过斯皮尔曼相关性分析,研究发现患者参与和安全文化之间存在正相关,其具体方面之间存在显著相关性,主要为中等程度。该研究强调了患者参与如何对医疗保健中的安全实践产生积极影响,这对于提高整体质量具有重要价值。