Challenges of Safety Culture in Educational and Medical Hospitals: A Qualitative Study in Tehran

  • Mahdi Hasani Ph.D. of Health Services Management, Research Center for Cognitive & Behavioral Sciences in Police, Directorate of Health, Rescue & Treatment, Police Force, Tehran, Iran
  • Hasan Abolghasem Gorji Associate Professor, Department of Health Services Management, Hospital Management Research Center, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  • Asaad Ranaei Ph.D. of Health Services Management, Social Determinants of Health Research Center, Research Institute for Health Development, Kurdistan University of Medical Sciences, Sanandaj, Iran
  • Srva Rezaee Ph.D. student of Nursing, Clinical Care Research Center, Kurdistan University of Medical Sciences, Sanandaj, Iran
  • Noureddin Niknam Assistant Professor, Department of Public Health, Torbat Jam Faculty of Medical Sciences, Torbat Jam, Iran
Keywords: Safety, Safety culture, Teaching hospital, Qualitative study

Abstract

Background: Safety culture is the basis and dominant part of patient's safety, and is considered as the main axis of safety promotion programs and service quality. The purpose of this study was to explain the challenges of safety culture in Iranian educational centers with a qualitative approach.

Methods: This study was a contractual qualitative content analysis which conducted in 1400. The study population consisted of people who had 5 years of experience in taking care patient or working in the patient's safety and quality control unit in teaching and medical centers affiliated to Tehran University of Medical Sciences. Study data were saturated by purposeful snowball sampling and in-depth and semi-structured interviews with 25 participants. “Granheim and Landman approaches” and “Goba and Lincoln criteria” were used to analyze the data and solidify the research. The process of coding and analyzing research data was performed simultaneously; Finally, the extracted categories and subcategories were confirmed by the interviewees. MaxQDA 10 was used to analyze data.

Results: By analyzing the interviews, 331 codes, 7 categories and 20 subcategories were extracted. Lack of reporting errors, poor culture regarding no-blame, staffing issues, low understanding of patient safety, poor management support for patient safety, poor teamwork between units, and lack of open organizational communication were the main categories found and the most important challenges of safety culture in teaching and medical hospitals.

Conclusion: According to the findings of the research, developing codified and continuous educational programs, strengthening teamwork and communication, adopting a comprehensive approach to increase the presence of all members of the treatment team in the process of reporting, and analyzing and implementing error prevention programs are among the requirements for improving and promoting the safety culture and quality of service to patients.

Published
2023-03-12
Section
Articles