Perspectives of healthcare professionals in Qatar on causes of medication errors: A mixed methods study of safety culture

There is a lack of robust, rigorous mixed methods studies of patient safety culture generally and notably those which incorporate behavioural theories of change. The study aimed to quantify and explain key aspects of patient safety culture which were of most concern to healthcare professionals in Qa...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2018-09, Vol.13 (9), p.e0204801-e0204801
Hauptverfasser: Stewart, Derek, Thomas, Binny, MacLure, Katie, Pallivalapila, Abdulrouf, El Kassem, Wessam, Awaisu, Ahmed, McLay, James S, Wilbur, Kerry, Wilby, Kyle, Ryan, Cristin, Dijkstra, Andrea, Singh, Rajvir, Al Hail, Moza
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container_issue 9
container_start_page e0204801
container_title PloS one
container_volume 13
creator Stewart, Derek
Thomas, Binny
MacLure, Katie
Pallivalapila, Abdulrouf
El Kassem, Wessam
Awaisu, Ahmed
McLay, James S
Wilbur, Kerry
Wilby, Kyle
Ryan, Cristin
Dijkstra, Andrea
Singh, Rajvir
Al Hail, Moza
description There is a lack of robust, rigorous mixed methods studies of patient safety culture generally and notably those which incorporate behavioural theories of change. The study aimed to quantify and explain key aspects of patient safety culture which were of most concern to healthcare professionals in Qatar. A sequential explanatory mixed methods design of a cross-sectional survey followed by focus groups in Hamad Medical Corporation, Qatar. All doctors, nurses and pharmacists were invited to complete the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPS). Respondents expressing interest in focus group participation were sampled purposively, and discussions based on survey findings using the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) to explain behavioural determinants. One thousand, six hundred and four questionnaires were received (67.9% nurses, 13.3% doctors, 12.9% pharmacists). HSOPS composites with the lowest levels of positive responses were non-punitive response to errors (24.0% positive) and staffing (36.2%). Specific TDF determinants potentially associated with these composites were social/professional role and identity, emotions, and environmental context and resources. Thematic analysis identified issues of doctors relying on pharmacists to correct their errors and being reluctant to alter the prescribing of fellow doctors. There was a lack of recognition of nurses' roles and frequent policy non-adherence. Stress, workload and lack of staff at key times were perceived to be major contributors to errors. This study has quantified areas of concern relating to patient safety culture in Qatar and suggested important behavioural determinants. Rather than focusing on changing behaviour at the individual practitioner level, action may be required at the organisational strategic level to review policies, structures (including resource allocation and distribution) and processes which aim to promote patient safety culture.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0204801
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Specific TDF determinants potentially associated with these composites were social/professional role and identity, emotions, and environmental context and resources. Thematic analysis identified issues of doctors relying on pharmacists to correct their errors and being reluctant to alter the prescribing of fellow doctors. There was a lack of recognition of nurses' roles and frequent policy non-adherence. Stress, workload and lack of staff at key times were perceived to be major contributors to errors. This study has quantified areas of concern relating to patient safety culture in Qatar and suggested important behavioural determinants. 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Specific TDF determinants potentially associated with these composites were social/professional role and identity, emotions, and environmental context and resources. Thematic analysis identified issues of doctors relying on pharmacists to correct their errors and being reluctant to alter the prescribing of fellow doctors. There was a lack of recognition of nurses' roles and frequent policy non-adherence. Stress, workload and lack of staff at key times were perceived to be major contributors to errors. This study has quantified areas of concern relating to patient safety culture in Qatar and suggested important behavioural determinants. 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source Public Library of Science (PLoS) Journals Open Access; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Behavior
Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
Biology and Life Sciences
Causes of
Composite materials
Culture
Domains
Health care
Hospitals
Life sciences
Medical errors
Medical personnel
Medication errors
Medicine and Health Sciences
Methods
Mixed methods research
Nurses
Patient care
Patient safety
People and Places
Pharmacy
Physicians
Practice
Professionals
Quality
Resource allocation
Safety
Safety and security measures
Studies
Systematic review
Theory
title Perspectives of healthcare professionals in Qatar on causes of medication errors: A mixed methods study of safety culture
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