dc.description.abstract | Background: Medical and allied health professionals should adopt error reduction as a key strategic priority and
make patient safety improvement an ongoing, active process within their organization.
Objective: The present study investigates the perceptions of healthcare professionals toward patient safety culture
in hospitals throughout Hail Region, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Methods: This research, which uses a descriptive cross-sectional approach to evaluate the perceptions of
healthcare professionals toward patient safety culture, was conducted at four major hospitals in Hail Region,
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and involved 255 healthcare professionals, who served as respondents based on systematic
random sampling. Standard deviation and the chi-square test of independence were used for statistical
analysis. This study was approved by the Ethics Review Committee (H-2016-057) of the University of Hail.
Results: Among the patient safety aspects, patient safety grade received the highest mean value (3.56 ± 0.72),
whereas handoff
s and transitions received the least consensus (3.00 ± 0.34). Interestingly, hospital work experience
signifi
cantly correlated to work area (p = 0.026), communications (p = 0.037), and the number of
events reported (p = 0.019) in the patient safety dimension. Moreover, the number of years in the area/unit
signifi
cantly related to the work area (p = 0.047) and supervisor/manager (p = 0.009). Only the number of
events reported showed a signifi
cant relationship with specialty or profession (p = 0.007).
Conclusion: Healthcare professionals have an affi
rmative view toward patient safety culture aspects, and positive
relationships were found between the patient safety dimensions and study participants’ profi
le. The fi
ndings
presented herein suggest that healthcare professionals affi
rm the practice of patient safety culture. However,
further research is required to continuously appraise the signifi
cance of healthcare-based quality indicators.
Overall, the assessment results suggest a platform for better intervention and transformation procedures targeting
the promotion of patient safety culture. | en_US |