Patient safety culture transformation in a children's hospital: an interprofessional approach

被引:20
作者
Nagelkerk, Jean [1 ]
Peterson, Tom [2 ]
Pawl, Brenda L. [1 ]
Teman, Susan [3 ]
Anyangu, Amy C. [2 ]
Mlynarczyk, Susan [1 ,4 ]
Baer, Lawrence J. [5 ]
机构
[1] Grand Valley State Univ, Off Vice Provost Hlth, Cook DeVos Ctr Hlth Sci, Grand Rapids, MI 49503 USA
[2] Sisters Char Leavenworth Hlth Syst, Denver, CO USA
[3] Spectrum Hlth Syst, Helen DeVos Childrens Hosp, Grand Rapids, MI USA
[4] Grand Valley State Univ, Kirkhof Coll Nursing, Grand Rapids, MI 49503 USA
[5] Lawrence Baer Stat Consulting, Grand Rapids, MI USA
关键词
Communication; interprofessional education and practice; pediatric patient safety; safety behaviors; safety rounding; simulation; SIMULATION;
D O I
10.3109/13561820.2014.885935
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
In 2008, a children's hospital based in the Midwest of the USA launched a hospital-wide safety transformation initiative to improve the safety and quality of care resulting in a decrease in the number of critical safety incidents. In order to build on the early successes of the Hospital's safety program and further improve safety metrics, investigators developed a set of multi-pronged, interprofessional interventions designed to improve overall safety outcomes. The interprofessional interventions focused on didactic training, simulation exercises and safety rounding components. Study results indicate that the didactic portion of the study intervention was the most effective component in terms of safety behavior knowledge gained and satisfaction. The student groups had statistically significant higher post-didactic (86.2 versus 77.7, p < 0.001) and post-simulation (85 versus 81.8, p < 0.05) knowledge scores than did the staff groups. After gaining knowledge in basic safety training didactic instruction, students and staff maintained the knowledge gain throughout the study, but no significant knowledge gains were observed after simulation experiences and rounding with safety coaches. An overall increase in hospital metrics (all safety events) of the study year, compared retrospectively to the previous year, was observed. Investigators attribute the increase in the metric indicators to greater attention to reporting safety events.
引用
收藏
页码:358 / 364
页数:7
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