Assessment Of Patient Safety Attitude Among Doctors And Nurses At Public Specialist Hospitals In Malaysia
SAYED ABDUL HAMID, S. B.; ISMAIL, A.; SULONG, S.
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Patient safety remains a global problem that affects both developed and developing countries. Healthcare organizations should focus on the need of assessing safety culture as that will provide basic understanding on safety related perceptions of their staffs. ObjectiveThis study was aimed to assess baseline level and mean score of every domain of the patient safety attitude among doctors and nurses in public hospitals in Selangor and to identify the determinants associated with patient safety attitude in all domains : teamwork, safety climate, working condition, job satisfaction, stress recognition and perception of management. MethodThis was a cross-sectional study utilizing the Safety Attitude Questionnaires (SAQ) involving 142 doctors and 231 nurses in three public hospitals in Selangor. The samples were selected through proportionate stratified random sampling. Data was analysed using descriptive, bivariate and multivariate analysis. ResultsThe response rate was 83% in which job satisfaction (73.78{+/-}20.54) and perception of management (58.98{+/-}16.28) received the highest and lowest mean score, respectively. The factors associated with positive patient safety attitude towards 1)teamwork were position (OR 1.99, p=0.03) and history of attending patient safety training (OR 3.228, p = 0.000); 2) safety climate were history of attending patient safety training (OR 7.283, p = 0.000); 3) job satisfaction were education level (OR 35.709, p=0.000), position (OR 10.598, p=0.000) and history of attending patient safety training (OR 2.883, p = 0.000); 4) perception of management were age (OR 2.084,p=0.021) and work area (OR 2.461,p=0.012); 5) working condition were age (OR2.200,p 0.003) and history of attending patient safety training (OR1.738, p 0.032). ConclusionRespondents with history of attending patient safety training have more positive attitude towards teamwork, safety climate, job satisfaction and working condition. Improving patient safety culture should be priorotized by the hospital management team to inculcate safety culture in healthcare providers. STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS OF THIS STUDYO_LIThis study reports the outcomes of patient safety attitude in public hospitals in Malaysia. C_LIO_LIThis study has a good response rate. C_LIO_LIThe study covers both types of hospitals in Malaysia (specialist and non-specialist hospitals). C_LIO_LIThe respondents were from 2 categories of healthcare professionals. C_LIO_LIThe factor of limited time and financial constraint limit the ability to include bigger sample into this study C_LI
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