Purpose:The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between safety attitude and practices of nurses at emergency departments, in hospitals. Study samples: A total of 251 nurses working in the emergency department at 18 hospitals, which have over 300-beds in K-do and C-do (province) from May to July, 2014. Methods: A descriptive research study using a survey questionnaire on safety attitude scale safe practices was used. Results: There were significant differences in the level of perception of safety attitude and priority and progress of safe practices according to the nurses' age and number of safety education sessions. There were positive correlations between priority and progress of safe practices. However, there were no correlations between priority and safety attitude. Conclusion: The nurses' perception of attitude toward safety practice was positively impacted on the progress of safe practices in the emergency department.Key words: Emergency Service, Hospital, Safety, Nurse
IntroductionIn the emergency department (ER), patients' lives depend on the medical personnel's quick identification of issues and appropriate interventions using critical thinking skills [1]. Therefore, in the ER, qualified and experienced medical personnel are required to provide immediate and appropriate interventions to the patients in need of emergency care [2]. In a study focusing on medical errors in hospitalized patients revealed that an average of 9.2 % of 5,744,566 in-patients had experienced an Incidence of medical error and an estimated death rate among those who had an incident of medical error was 7.4% in 2010. Majority of those errors were preventable medical errors and more than 80% of these errors occurred in the emergency department [3]. Increasing number of critically ill patients requiring immediate attention in the ER, despite the lack of available beds for these patients, resulted in increased patients' length of stay in the ER while decreasing nurses or