BackgroundPatient safety is of the utmost importance in health care. The patient safety
culture in an institution has great impact on patient safety. To enhance patient
safety and to design strategies to reduce medical injuries, there is a current
focus on measuring the patient safety culture. The aim of the present study was to
describe the patient safety culture in an ED at two different hospitals before and
after a Quality improvement (QI) project that was aimed to enhance patient
safety.MethodsA repeated cross-sectional design, using the Hospital Survey On Patient Safety
Culture questionnaire before and after a quality improvement project in two
emergency departments at a county hospital and a university hospital. The
questionnaire was developed to obtain a better understanding of the patient safety
culture of an entire hospital or of specific departments. The Swedish version has
51 questions and 15 dimensions.ResultsAt the county hospital, a difference between baseline and follow-up was observed
in three dimensions. For two of these dimensions, Team-work within hospital
and Communication openness, a higher score was measured at the follow-up.
At the university hospital, a higher score was measured at follow-up for the two
dimensions Team-work across hospital units and Team-work within
hospital.ConclusionThe result showed changes in the self-estimated patient safety culture, mainly
regarding team-work and communication openness. Most of the improvements at
follow-up were seen by physicians, and mainly at the county hospital.
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