Association of nurse work environment and safety climate on patient mortality: A cross-sectional study
There are two largely distinct research literatures on the association of the nurse work environment and the safety climate on patient outcomes. To determine whether hospital safety climate and work environment make comparable or distinct contributions to patient mortality. Cross-sectional secondary...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of nursing studies 2017-09, Vol.74, p.155-161 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | There are two largely distinct research literatures on the association of the nurse work environment and the safety climate on patient outcomes.
To determine whether hospital safety climate and work environment make comparable or distinct contributions to patient mortality.
Cross-sectional secondary analysis of linked datasets of Registered Nurse survey responses, adult acute care discharge records, and hospital characteristics.
Acute care hospitals in California, Florida, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.
The sample included 600 hospitals linked to 27,009 nurse survey respondents and 852,974 surgical patients.
Nurse survey data included assessments of the nurse work environment and hospital safety climate. The outcome of interest was in-hospital mortality. Data analyses included descriptive statistics and multivariate random intercept logistic regression.
In a fully adjusted model, a one standard deviation increase in work environment score was associated with an 8.1% decrease in the odds of mortality (OR 0.919, p |
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ISSN: | 0020-7489 1873-491X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2017.06.004 |