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Journal ArticleDOI

Safety culture and complications after bariatric surgery.

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TLDR
Although nurses provide better information about hospital safety culture, surgeons are better judges of safety culture in the operating room, and safety culture is associated with rates of serious surgical complications in bariatric surgery.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To assess relationships between safety culture and complications within 30 days of bariatric surgery. BACKGROUND Safety culture refers to the quality of teamwork, coordination, and communication, as well as responses to error in health care settings. Although safety culture is thought to be an important determinant of surgical outcomes, few studies have examined this empirically. METHODS We surveyed staff from 22 Michigan hospitals participating in a statewide bariatric surgery collaborative. Each safety culture survey item was rated on a 1 to 5 Likert scale with lower scores representing better patient safety culture. These data were linked to clinical registry data for 24,117 bariatric surgery patients between 2007 and 2010. We used negative binomial regression to calculate incidence rates and incidence rate ratios measuring the increase in hospitals' rate of complications per unit increase in safety culture (individual items as well as hospital and operating room-specific subscales), controlling for patient risk factors, procedure mix, and bariatric procedure volume. RESULTS All 22 hospitals participated in this study, submitting safety culture ratings from 53 surgeons, 102 nurses, and 29 operating room administrators. Rates of serious complications were significantly lower among hospitals receiving an overall safety rating of excellent from nurses (1.5%), compared with those receiving a very good (2.6%) or acceptable (4.6%) rating (P = <0.0001). Surgeons' overall safety ratings were also associated with rates of serious complications (2.1% excellent, 2.6% very good, 4.7% acceptable, P = 0.011). Nurses' ratings of the hospital-specific subscale (P = 0.002) and surgeons' ratings of the operating room-specific subscale (P = 0.045) were also associated with rates of serious complications. Of the individual items, those related to coordination and communication between hospital units were the most strongly associated with rates of complications. Operating room administrator ratings of safety culture were not related to rates of complications for any of the domains of safety culture studied. CONCLUSIONS Safety culture is associated with rates of serious surgical complications in bariatric surgery. Although nurses provide better information about hospital safety culture, surgeons are better judges of safety culture in the operating room. Interventions targeting safety culture, particularly coordination and communication, seem to be important for quality improvement.

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Citations
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Impact of Hospital Characteristics on Failure to Rescue Following Major Surgery.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century

Alastair Baker
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TL;DR: Analyzing health care organizations as complex systems, Crossing the Quality Chasm also documents the causes of the quality gap, identifies current practices that impede quality care, and explores how systems approaches can be used to implement change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human error: models and management

TL;DR: The longstanding and widespread tradition of the person approach focuses on the unsafe acts—errors and procedural violations—of people at the sharp end: nurses, physicians, surgeons, anaesthetists, pharmacists, and the like.
Book

Managing the unexpected: Assuring high performance in an age of complexity.

TL;DR: Weick and Sutcliffe as discussed by the authors introduced the concept of "mindfulness" and outlined five qualities of the mindful organization and the organizational skills needed to achieve them, each concept is clearly expressed in vivid case studies of organizations that demonstrate mindful practices in action.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Safety Attitudes Questionnaire: psychometric properties, benchmarking data, and emerging research

TL;DR: The Safety Attitudes Questionnaire demonstrated good psychometric properties and healthcare organizations can use the survey to measure caregiver attitudes about six patient safety-related domains, to compare themselves with other organizations, to prompt interventions to improve safety attitudes and to measure the effectiveness of these interventions.
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