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Post-Pandemic Patient Safety Culture: A Case from a Large Metropolitan Hospital Group in Taiwan. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Patient safety culture and staff well-being are essential in hospitals, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • A study of 337 employees highlighted that factors like managerial role, seniority, and gender influence positive safety culture perceptions, while teamwork and stress recognition impact staff exhaustion.
  • Compared to 2018, post-pandemic employees felt better about working conditions but experienced increased exhaustion, emphasizing the need for hospital leaders to enhance patient safety culture and support employee resilience going forward.

Article Abstract

Patient safety is the core goal of medical institutions. The present study focuses on the patient safety culture and staff well-being admit the COVID-19 pandemic. In a large metropolitan hospital group, 337 employees who had participated in the quality improvement interventions completed an anonymous questionnaire of patient safety culture and personal well-being. The multiple regression analyses indicated that managerial role, seniority, female gender and direct contact with a patient were significantly related to the positive attitude on overall or certain dimensions of safety culture. Multivariate analysis also found that dimensions of teamwork climate, safety climate, job satisfaction and stress recognition as patient safety culture predicted staff exhaustion. Finally, comparing with the available institutional historic data in 2018, the COVID group scored higher on the working condition dimension of patient safety culture, but lower on the stress recognition dimension. The COVID group also scored higher on exhaustion. In the post-pandemic era, there seems to be an improvement on certain aspect of the patient safety culture among hospital staff, and the improvement is more prevalent for managers. However, exhaustion is also a poignant problem for all employees. These findings can inform hospital decision-makers in planning and implementing future improvements of patient safety culture and promoting employee well-being and resilience. Our findings also reveal directions for future research.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8123150PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094537DOI Listing

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