Suggestions for improving patient safety culture within international chiropractic teaching settings: A qualitative analysis of clinic partner feedback from a mixed method survey.

IF 0.7 Q4 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Stacie A Salsbury, Martha Funabashi, Kurt A Kangas, Vanessa Woosley, Alex N Crouch, Amanda Brown, Alexander D Lee, Cameron P A Borody, Bryan J Porter, Eric St-Onge, Michael P Moore, Katherine A Pohlman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: To describe clinic stakeholder suggestions for improvements in patient safety in chiropractic teaching clinical settings.

Methods: We conducted a mixed-methods, cross-sectional survey to extend SafetyNET, a research project into patient safety culture in chiropractic. Our sample (n = 864) included clinic students, faculty, and staff from chiropractic programs from 4 different countries. We launched the Survey to Support Quality Improvement via REDCap, with respondents completing site-specific surveys in 6-week increments between May 2019 and November 2021. Open-ended questions elicited written suggestions to improve patient safety in 4 domains: education, clinical setting, communication, and leadership. Cross-institutional research teams conducted qualitative content analysis to identify relevant themes.

Results: Respondents (n = 460; 53.2%, of which 47.2% were female) included 386 students, 45 faculty, and 29 staff. We analyzed 166 to 225 unique responses consisting of short phrases to full paragraphs per question. Our analysis inspired an interactive Safety Compass Model of Patient Safety Culture in Chiropractic Teaching Clinics, which includes 8 themes. Accountability and Transparency were essential values for individuals and organizations. Safety Education on safety-related topics was counterbalanced by Safety Reporting structures and procedures. Educators teach Clinical Standards of patient safety, while communication patterns circulate Risk Mitigation processes. Clinic settings establish Patient-Centered environments, while leadership sustains the overall framework through Administrative Oversight.

Conclusion: Students, faculty, and staff stakeholders identified myriad opportunities to improve patient safety culture in chiropractic teaching clinics. Chiropractic teaching programs are encouraged to use the Safety Compass Model to identify and address areas for improvement in their own institutions.

改善国际脊医教学环境中患者安全文化的建议:一项混合方法调查中临床伙伴反馈的定性分析。
目的:探讨临床利益相关者对脊椎指压临床教学中患者安全的建议。方法:我们进行了一项混合方法的横断面调查,以扩展SafetyNET,一项关于脊椎指压治疗患者安全培养的研究项目。我们的样本(n = 864)包括来自4个不同国家脊椎指压疗法项目的临床学生、教师和工作人员。我们通过REDCap启动了支持质量改进的调查,受访者在2019年5月至2021年11月之间以6周的增量完成特定地点的调查。开放式问题引出了在教育、临床环境、沟通和领导四个领域改善患者安全的书面建议。跨机构研究小组进行了定性内容分析,以确定相关主题。结果:受访者(n = 460;53.2%,其中47.2%为女性)包括386名学生,45名教师和29名工作人员。我们分析了166到225个独特的回答,每个问题由短句到完整的段落组成。我们的分析启发了脊医教学诊所患者安全文化的交互式安全指南针模型,该模型包括8个主题。问责制和透明度是个人和组织的基本价值观。与安全有关主题的安全教育与安全报告结构和程序相平衡。教育工作者教授患者安全的临床标准,而沟通模式则传播风险缓解过程。诊所设置建立以患者为中心的环境,而领导层通过行政监督维持整体框架。结论:学生,教师和工作人员利益相关者确定了无数的机会,以提高患者安全文化在脊医教学诊所。脊医教学项目被鼓励使用安全罗盘模型来识别和解决他们自己的机构需要改进的地方。
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来源期刊
Journal of Chiropractic Education
Journal of Chiropractic Education EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
37.50%
发文量
52
期刊介绍: The Journal of Chiropractic Education is an international, peer-reviewed journal dedicated to publishing research and scholarly articles pertaining to education theory, pedagogy, methodologies, practice, and other content relevant to the health professions academe. Journal contents are of interest to teachers, researchers, clinical educators, administrators, and students.
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