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Physicians' perception of and attitudes towards patient safety culture and medical error reporting

환자안전 문화와 의료과오 보고에 대한 의사의 인식과 태도

  • Kang, Min-Ah (Ewha Womans University, College of Social Sciences) ;
  • Kim, Jeong-Eun (Seoul National University, College of Nursing, Institute of Nursing Science) ;
  • An, Kyung-Eh (Kyunghee University East-West Medical Research Institute) ;
  • Kim, Yoon (Seoul National University, College of Medicine) ;
  • Kim, Suk-Wha (Seoul National University, College of Medicine)
  • 강민아 (이화여자대학교 사회과학대학 행정학) ;
  • 김정은 (서울대학교 간호대학, 서울대학교 간호과학연구소) ;
  • 안경애 (경희대학교 동서의학연구소) ;
  • 김윤 (서울대학교 의과대학 의료관리학교실) ;
  • 김석화 (서울대학교 의과대학 성형외과학교실)
  • Published : 2005.12.01

Abstract

The objectives of this study were (1) to describe doctors' perception and attitudes toward patient safety culture and medical error reporting in their working unit and hospitals, (2) to examine whether these perception and attitudes differ by doctors' characteristics, such as sex, position, and specialties, and (3) to understand the relationship between overall perception of patient safety in their working unit and each sub domain of patient safety culture. A survey was conducted with 135 doctors working in a university hospital in Korea. After descriptive analyses and chi-square tests of subgroup differences, a multivariate-regression of overall perception of patient safety in their unit with sub-domains of patient safety culture was conducted. Overall, a significant proportion of doctors expressed negative perception of their working units' patient safety culture, many reporting potentials for patient safety problems to occur in their unit. They also negatively viewed their hospital leadership's commitment on patient safety. Regarding the patient safety in their working unit, doctors were most worried about staffing level and observance of safety procedures. Most doctors did not know how and which medical error to report. They also perceived that medical errors would work against them personally and penalize them. About 22 percent of respondents believed that even seriously harmful medical errors were not reported.

Keywords

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