6533b857fe1ef96bd12b3be5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Patient safety culture in Italian out-of-hours primary care service: a national cross-sectional survey study.

Gunnar Tschudi BondevikGunnar Tschudi BondevikEllen Catharina DeilkåsStefano CelottoPierpaolo MarchettiAlberto VaonaNicola VeroneseDag HofossJacopo Demurtas

subject

medicine.medical_specialtyBurnout03 medical and health sciencesPatient safetystatistical factor analysis0302 clinical medicineCronbach's alphaitalypatient safetymedicineHealthcare quality improvement Italy patient safety safety management statistical factor analysis surveys and questionnaires030212 general & internal medicineResponse rate (survey)lcsh:R5-920Descriptive statisticsResearch030503 health policy & servicesWorkloadConfirmatory factor analysisExploratory factor analysisFamily medicinesurveys and questionnairessafety managementhealthcare quality improvementlcsh:Medicine (General)0305 other medical scienceFamily PracticePsychology

description

BackgroundOut-of-hours (OOH) services in Italy provide >10 million consultations every year. To the authors' knowledge, no data on patient safety culture (PSC) have been reported.AimTo assess PSC in the Italian OOH setting.Design & settingNational cross-sectional survey using the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire — Ambulatory Version (SAQ-AV).MethodThe SAQ-AV was translated into Italian and distributed in a convenience sample of OOH doctors in 2015. Answers were collected anonymously by Qualtrics. Stata (version 14) was used to estimate Cronbach’s alpha, perform exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis, correlate items to doctors’ characteristics, and to do item descriptive analysis.ResultsOverall, 692 OOH doctors were contacted, with a 71% response rate. In the exploratory factor analysis (EFA), four factors were identified: Communication and Safety Climate (14 items); Perceptions of Management (eight items); Workload and Clinical Risk (six items); and Burnout Risk (four items).These four factors accounted for 68% of the total variance (Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin [KMO] statistic = 0.843). Cronbach’s alpha ranged from 0.710–0.917. OOH doctors were often dissatisfied with their job; there is insufficient staff to provide optimal care and there is no training or supervision for new personnel and family medicine trainees. Service managers are perceived as distant, with particular issues concerning the communication between managers and OOH doctors. A large proportion of OOH doctors (56.8%) state that they do not receive adequate support.ConclusionThese findings could be useful for informing policies on how to improve PSC in Italian OOH service.

https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2736453