Publication | Open Access
Measuring patient safety culture: an assessment of the clustering of responses at unit level and hospital level
127
Citations
13
References
2009
Year
The study tests whether the HSOPS captures patient safety culture rather than individual attitudes and identifies the optimal level—individual, unit, or hospital—for targeted safety interventions. Using national data from 1,889 staff across 87 units in 19 Dutch hospitals, the authors fitted three‑level random‑intercept models to assess how responses to the 11 HSOPS dimensions cluster at individual, unit, and hospital levels. Results show that responses cluster mainly at the unit level (ICC 4.3–31.7), with only three dimensions also clustering at the hospital level, confirming that HSOPS measures group culture and suggesting that safety improvement efforts should focus on the unit level.
<h3>Objectives:</h3> To test the claim that the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPS) measures patient safety culture instead of mere individual attitudes and to determine the most appropriate level (individual, unit or hospital level) for interventions aimed at improving the culture of patient safety. <h3>Methods:</h3> National patient safety culture data were used from 1889 hospital staff working at 87 units in 19 hospitals across The Netherlands. The multilevel structure of the variation of responses to the 11 dimensions of the questionnaire was explored by fitting three-level random intercept models: individual, unit and hospital level. <h3>Results:</h3> The unit level was the dominating level for the clustering of responses to the 11 dimensions. Intraclass correlations (ICC) at unit level ranged from 4.3 to 31.7, representing considerable higher-level variation. For three dimensions of patient safety culture, there was significant clustering of responses at hospital level as well: (1) Feedback about and learning from error, (2) Teamwork across hospital units and (3) Non-punitive response to error. <h3>Conclusions:</h3> At a conceptual level, the detection of clustering of responses within units and hospitals confirms the claim that the HSOPS measures group culture and not just individual attitudes. In addition, the results have implications for interventions on patient safety culture. Improvement efforts should be directed at their most relevant organisational level. In general, improvement efforts on patient safety culture should be addressed at the unit level, rather than the individual or hospital level.
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