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Nurses' perceptions about the patient safety climate in Primary Health Care.

Authors :
Guirardello EB
Jesus MVN
Vieira LC
Oliveira HC
Vergilio MSTG
Source :
Revista latino-americana de enfermagem [Rev Lat Am Enfermagem] 2024 Jan 26; Vol. 32, pp. e4092. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jan 26 (Print Publication: 2024).
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objective: to evaluate the patient safety climate in Primary Health Care from the perspective of nurses working in the services.<br />Method: a quantitative and cross-sectional study conducted with 148 nurses from a municipality in the state of São Paulo. The Brazilian version of the Primary Care Safety Questionnaire Survey and personal, professional, and organizational performance variables (intention to stay at work, job satisfaction, care quality, and frequency of incidents) were used. Parametric and non-parametric comparison tests and Spearman's correlation coefficient were performed, considering a 5% significance level.<br />Results: the safety climate was positive, varying from 4.52 to 5.33 and differing across districts for workload (p=0.0214) and leadership (p=0.0129). The safety climate professional variables and dimensions differed in relation to the frequency of incidents. Teamwork and safety and learning system were strongly correlated with job satisfaction and moderately with perceived care quality.<br />Conclusion: teamwork and safety and learning system stood out for their positive correlations with job satisfaction and care quality. A positive safety climate favors the involvement of Primary Care nurses to develop improvement plans aligned with the National Patient Safety Program.<br />Background: (1) The safety climate is perceived differently across health districts. (2) There is a correlation between the climate dimensions and professional satisfaction. (3) Workload and leadership exert an influence on the safety climate perception. (4) There is a relationship between the safety climate and reporting of care-related incidents. (5) The safety climate is perceived differently among nurses regarding their role.

Details

Language :
English; Spanish; Castilian; Portuguese
ISSN :
1518-8345
Volume :
32
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Revista latino-americana de enfermagem
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38294053
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1590/1518-8345.6374.4092