Assessing building blocks for patient safety culture —A quantitative assessment of Saudi Arabia

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Abstract

Purpose: The study analyzes staffs’ perception of a safety culture and their knowledge of safety measures in the hospitals of Saudi Arabia. Patients and methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted by considering six different public hospitals from Arar city, and by recruiting 503 nurses. Building blocks of patient safety culture were measured through survey questions. Results: The highest positive rating (81%) was received by both “people support one another in this unit” and “in this unit, people treat each other with respect.” Supervisor/ manager expectations and actions promoting patient safety was rated neutrally (n = 283; 56%) with an average mean score of 3.17±0.50, which suggested a neutral response by participants. Organizational learning, along with continuous improvement, was positively rated (n = 406; 81%) with an average mean score of 3.93±0.61. Conclusion: It demonstrated that participant nurses neither disagree nor agree on the level of patient safety culture prevailing in their hospital setting.

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APA

Alrowely, Z., & Baker, O. G. (2019). Assessing building blocks for patient safety culture —A quantitative assessment of Saudi Arabia. Risk Management and Healthcare Policy, 12, 275–285. https://doi.org/10.2147/RMHP.S223097

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