Title: Relationship between hospital safety climate and outcomes
1Relationship between hospital safety climate and
outcomes
- Sara Singer, Alyson Falwell, Shoutzu Lin, Toby
Rathgeb, Laurence Baker - AcademyHealth Annual Meeting
- June 26, 2006
- Financial support for this study has been
provided by the Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality RO1 HSO13920 and by the VA HSRD
2Patient safety and safety culture
- Significant patient safety problems plague US
hospitals - A culture of safety is increasingly recognized as
a key to reducing adverse events in hospitals - Yet we lack conclusive evidence of the
relationship between safety culture and patient
safety outcomes
3Research questions
- How do individuals working in hospitals perceive
the culture of safety in their facilities? - Does perceived safety culture relate to hospital
safety performance? - Do both strength and uniformity of safety climate
matter? - Whose perception of safety culture corresponds
most to safety outcomes?
4Hospital safety culture and its measurement
- Shared values, beliefs, and norms of behavior,
articulated by senior management and translated
consistently into effective work practices - Measured using the Patient Safety Climate in
Healthcare Organizations (PSCHO) survey - PSCHO measures safety climate, i.e., perceptions
of safety culture at a point in time - We examine rates of problematic responses,
i.e., those indicating a lack of safety culture
5Survey content and sample
- Survey includes 38 questions and 9 sub-scales
specific to individual aspects of safety culture - Surveyed 18,361 individuals from a stratified
random sample of 92 US hospitals, representing
four regions of the US and three size categories
between March 2004 and May 2005 - 100 of active, hospital-based physicians,
- 100 of senior managers (dept heads or above)
- 10 random sample of all other personnel
- 52 response rate
6Comparison of safety climate to outcomes
- Two individual-level factors, most proximate
determinants of safety behaviors - Willingness to seek help (alpha 0.58)
- Asking for help is a sign of incompetence
- Telling others about my mistakes is embarrassing
- If I make a mistake that has significant
consequences and nobody notices, I do not tell
anyone about it - Fear of blame punishment (alpha 0.61)
- If people find out that I made a mistake, I will
be disciplined - Clinicians who make serious mistakes are usually
punished
7Examination of strength and uniformity of safety
climate to outcomes
- Strength of safety climate (mean problematic
response) - Uniformity of safety climate (variance in
problematic response) - Interaction between them
Safety culture uniformity
Safety culture strength
Safety outcomes
8Consideration of alternative perceptions of
safety culture
- Nurses v. doctors
- Front line workers v. senior managers
9Outcomes measures and analysis
- Measured clinical outcomes using AHRQ patient
safety indicators (PSIs), computed using 2000
HCUP data - Selected 14 out of 20 PSIs that we hypothesized
would be related to safety climate. Excluded
indicators - Whose outcome is driven by a single unit
(obstetrics) - That have been criticized as highly unreliable
(failure to rescue) - For which no events occurred in study hospitals
(transfusion reaction) - Included in analysis a stratified random sample
of 47 hospitals from 15 states for which PSCHO
and PSI data are available - Analyzed relationship of safety climate to all
PSIs or groups of PSIs
10Safety climate in 92 hospitals
My unit recognizes individual safety achievement
through rewards and incentives
If I make a mistake that has significant
consequences and nobody notices, I do not
tell anyone about it
11Safety climate in 92 hospitals
Telling others about my mistakes is embarrassing
If I make a mistake that has significant
consequences and nobody notices, I do not
tell anyone about it
Asking for help is a sign of incompetence
12Safety climate in 92 hospitals
If people find out that I made a mistake, I will
be disciplined
Clinicians who make serious mistakes are usually
punished
13Relationship of safety climate dimensions to PSIs
- Safety climate related more strongly to PSIs than
did other hospital characteristics
nurse-to-patient hour ratios, early technology
adoption, and incident reporting activity
14Relationship of safety climate dimensions to PSIs
- Safety climate related more strongly to PSIs than
did other hospital characteristics
nurse-to-patient hour ratios, early technology
adoption, and incident reporting activity
15Relationship of safety climate dimensions to PSIs
- Safety climate related more strongly to PSIs than
did other hospital characteristics
nurse-to-patient hour ratios, early technology
adoption, and incident reporting activity
16Relationship of safety climate dimensions to PSIs
- Safety climate related more strongly to PSIs than
did other hospital characteristics
nurse-to-patient hour ratios, early technology
adoption, and incident reporting activity
17Relationship of strength and uniformity of
willingness to seek help to PSIs
18PSI-safety climate relationship differences by
type of personnel
19PSI-safety climate relationship differences by
type of personnel
20PSI-safety climate relationship differences by
type of personnel
21PSI-safety climate relationship differences by
type of personnel
22Discussion
- Two dimensions of safety climate were
statistically significantly associated with PSI
performance - Lack of willingness to seek help (plt.05) and
- Fear of blame punishment (plt.01)
- Uniformity moderated the relationship between
willingness to seek help and safety performance - Nurse and front line workers perceptions
correlated more strongly with adverse safety
events than did physician and senior managers
perceptions respectively
23Strengths and limitations
- Strengths
- One of the first studies to link safety climate
directly to clinical safety outcomes - Results representative of US hospitals
- Limitations
- Need to explore other dimensions of safety
climate - Need verification of adverse event rates
- Need longitudinal study to establish causality
24Conclusion
- Findings support the claim that culture and
outcomes are strongly related - Both strength and uniformity of safety climate
matter - Senior managers may misperceive important aspects
of safety climate - Presence of blame and unwillingness to seek help
suggest interventions that address
deeply-ingrained beliefs are needed to improve
hospital safety culture