Premium
Relationship of Safety Climate and Safety Performance in Hospitals
Author(s) -
Singer Sara,
Lin Shoutzu,
Falwell Alyson,
Gaba David,
Baker Laurence
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
health services research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.706
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1475-6773
pISSN - 0017-9124
DOI - 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2008.00918.x
Subject(s) - patient safety , safety climate , medicine , occupational safety and health , interpersonal communication , psychology , health care , social psychology , economics , pathology , economic growth
Objective. To examine the relationship between measures of hospital safety climate and hospital performance on selected Patient Safety Indicators (PSIs). Data Sources. Primary data from a 2004 survey of hospital personnel. Secondary data from the 2005 Medicare Provider Analysis and Review File and 2004 American Hospital Association's Annual Survey of Hospitals. Study Design. A cross‐sectional study of 91 hospitals. Data Collection. Negative binomial regressions used an unweighted, risk‐adjusted PSI composite as dependent variable and safety climate scores and controls as independent variables. Some specifications included interpersonal, work unit, and organizational safety climate dimensions. Others included separate measures for senior managers and frontline personnel's safety climate perceptions. Principal Findings. Hospitals with better safety climate overall had lower relative incidence of PSIs, as did hospitals with better scores on safety climate dimensions measuring interpersonal beliefs regarding shame and blame. Frontline personnel's perceptions of better safety climate predicted lower risk of experiencing PSIs, but senior manager perceptions did not. Conclusions. The results link hospital safety climate to indicators of potential safety events. Some aspects of safety climate are more closely related to safety events than others. Perceptions about safety climate among some groups, such as frontline staff, are more closely related than perceptions in other groups.