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Safety Attitudes Questionnaire A way to measure “Culture of Safety” Presented via Skype (2:00pm-2:15pm) URMPM World Congress 9 th September 2012 –London Krish Sankaranarayanan MS, MBA, CPHQ Senior Safety Officer Tawam Hospital Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates

Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

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Measuring “Culture of Safety” Tawam’s Experience Discovery: Tawam Hospital’s Executive leadership realized the need to establish a “Culture of Safety” within the organization and implemented the Johns Hopkins Medicine “Comprehensive Unit based Safety Program” (CUSP). CUSP was introduced as a pilot project in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NNU) and Paediatric Oncology Unit (Peds Onc). Prior to implementation the leadership decided to measure staff perception of safety using evidence based tool. Solution: Tawam partnered with Pascal Metrics to implement the Safety Attitude Questionnaire survey. The SAQ was administered to all Tawam Hospital staff in three phases (2008, 2010 and 2011). In 2010 the pilot CUSP units were also resurveyed to determine the status of safety culture since its introduction in 2008.  An email from the CEO was sent to the participants encouraging them to participate in the SAQ survey.  Physicians, nurses, ward-clerks; respiratory therapist, physiotherapist, dieticians etc were included in the survey.  Those who spent at least 50% of their time in the identified units were only included to participate in the survey.  Survey was administered during departmental meetings to increase response rate.  Conducted separate sessions of physicians.  Staff dropped the completed surveys in an envelope.  82% of staff in the patient care areas of the whole hospital participated in the overall 3 phases of SAQ Survey.  The three CUSP pilot units were re-surveyed in 2010.  Anonymity, privacy and confidentiality were maintained from the beginning till the end. Outcome: The survey results were graded against percentage positive responses. Responses that were less than 60% mark were graded in the danger zone and anything above the 80% mark were graded in the goal zone. Teamwork climate and Safety climate scale scores are considered to be primary dependent variables, because they are important in preventing patient harm. The overall hospital score on all the domain scores were in the danger zone, less than 60%. 20 clinical locations in 2010 and 7 clinical locations in 2011 had less than 60% scores in the primary dependent variables. The SAQ results were disseminated department wise in the presence of a hospital Senior Executive. Every department did an action plan using the SAQ de-briefer tool. The hospital administrators to bring about the change played a facilitators role and helped the departments to come up with their actionable plans. The hospital leadership in their pursuit to continuing the culture of safety journey, identified six more units for CUSP implementation based on the Phase 2 SAQ scores of 2010. Accordingly the Medical 1, Medical 2, Surgical 1, Surgical 2, Day Case and OBGYN Units were identified for the CUSP roll out. Senior Executive leaders were assigned to each of these new CUSP units to ensure leadership commi

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Page 1: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Safety Attitudes Questionnaire

A way to measure “Culture of Safety”

Presented via Skype (2:00pm-2:15pm)URMPM World Congress 9th September 2012 –London

Krish Sankaranarayanan MS, MBA, CPHQSenior Safety OfficerTawam Hospital Abu DhabiUnited Arab Emirates

Page 2: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

“Culture is local” and “so is change.”

Page 3: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Safety Attitudes Questionnaire provides a baseline to understand staff perception of safety

Page 4: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Early adopters- Aviation

6 main components (called characteristics) of safety culture aredescribed:• Commitment• Justness• Information• Awareness• Adaptability• Behavior

Page 5: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Most rigorously tested and well known tools •Safety Attitudes Questionnaire •Patient Safety Culture in Healthcare

Organizations •Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture •Safety Climate Survey •Manchester Patient Safety Assessment

Framework

Page 6: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- Adopted in Healthcare

J. Bryan Sexton, Ph.D., • Was the Assistant Professor in Anesthesiology and

Critical Care Medicine at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

• Currently Director of Patient Safety Operations at Duke University Hospital.

Page 7: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”
Page 8: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Culture of Safety Survey- Domains

1.Teamwork Climate: The perceived quality of teamwork and collaboration within a given unit.

2.Safety Climate: The perceived level of commitment to and focus on patient safety within a given unit.

3.Job Satisfaction: Employees' general feelings of positivity regarding their work experience.

4.Stress Recognition: Employees' recognition of how stressors impact their performance.

5.Working Conditions: Employees' perceptions of the quality of their work environment.

6.Perceptions of Hospital Management: Employees' perceptions of the support and competence of hospital-level management.

7.Perceptions of Unit Management: Employees' perceptions of the support and competence of unit-level management

Page 9: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Culture linkages to Clinical, Operational & other Outcomes

• Wrong Site Surgeries• Decubitus Ulcers • Delays• Bloodstream

Infections• Post-Op Sepsis• Post-Op Infections• Post-Op Bleeding• PE/DVT• RN Turnover• Absenteeism• VAP

• Burnout• Unit size• Communication

breakdowns• Familiarity• Spirituality• Most validated:

Qual. Saf. Health Care 2005;14;364-366

Page 10: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

SAQ- Administration methodology•The hospital partnered with Pascal Metrics. • Identified the units and collected the list of staff.•Staff that spent 50% of their time in the

identified units were only included in the survey.•All disciplines were included in the survey.•Given a brief introduction of the purpose of the

survey•Was anonymous and a voluntary exercise.•Hand delivered survey•Done during a staff/department meeting.

Page 11: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

SAQ- Administration methodology. Contd…

•Distributed sharpened pencil with eraser. •Didn’t leave the surveys in pigeon holes

for staff to complete.•Didn’t leave the surveys with

departments heads.•Conducted separate sessions of

physicians. •Staff dropped the completed surveys in an

envelope.

Page 12: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”
Page 13: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Survey participation and response rate•82% of staff in patient care areas of the whole

hospital participated in the overall 3 phases of SAQ Survey.

Location YearTargeted staff

Surveys Administered

SurveyReturned

Surveyresponse rate

Phase 1 CUSP Pilot Units 2008 199 199 199 100%

Phase 2 In-patient areas 2010 1600 1476 1450 98%

Phase 3Out-Patient & satellite locations

Qtr 42011 805 497 483 60%

Total 2604 2172 2132

Page 14: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Dissemination of the SAQ ? Challenges we faced•The questions in the SAQ did not translate

well.•Staff took the results personally if low

scores.•Dept managers defended low scores.

▫Especially on perception of unit management.

•Staff expected positive actions from management based on SAQ results.

Page 15: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Dissemination of the SAQ ?

•Results were sensitive, so did it with individual departments.

•Did not share results of one dept with the other.

•Had a senior executive leader (C-Suites)while disseminating.

•Emphasized that the SAQ was a survey on perception and NOT AN EXAM RESULT.

•Emphasized that “Culture is local” and “so is change.” (Micro System)

Page 16: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Perceptions of Hospital ManagementIs always low

•Staff may not see the C-suites frequently.•Staff relate themselves more with the unit

mangers than executive leaders.

Page 17: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

2008 SAQ Phase-1 (CUSP Pilot Units)

Team

work

Safet

y

Job

Satisf

actio

n

Stress

Rec

ognit

ion

Perce

ption

s of

Hos

pital

Man

agem

ent

Perce

ption

s of

Unit

Man

agem

ent

Wor

king

Condit

ions

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

SAQ Results 2008

ICU

Pediatric Oncology

NNU

Domain

Av

era

ge

% P

os

itiv

e

Page 18: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

2010 SAQ Phase-2 (All In-patient Units- & CUSP Pilot Units Re-survey)

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2011 SAQ Phase-3 (Out-patient Units)

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Team Work Climate

Page 21: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

ICU Physicians and ICU RN Collaboration

51%

88%

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

K P L &D

RN rates ICU Physician ICU Physician rates RN

Page 22: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Teamwork Disconnect

•RN: Good teamwork means I am asked for my input

•MD: Good teamwork means the nurse does what I say

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Page 24: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Safety Climate

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Job Satisfaction

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Stress Recognition

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Perceptions Of Hospital Management

Page 28: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Perceptions Of Unit Management

Page 29: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Working Conditions

Page 30: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Dependent Variables of SAQ

•The primary dependent variables -teamwork climate and safety climate scale scores.

•These primary dependent variables were chosen because they are important in preventing patient harm.

•The rest of them are secondary dependent variables.

Sexton J.B., et al.: The Safety Attitudes Questionnaire: Psychometric properties, benchmarking data, and emerging research. BMC Health Serv Res 6(44):Apr. 3, 2006.Timmel J, Kent PS, Holzmueller CG, Paine L, Schulick RD, Pronovost PJ. Impact of the Comprehensive Unit-Based Safety Program (CUSP) on safety culture in a surgical inpatient unit. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf 2010;36(6):252-260.

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Safety Climate

Perception of Unit Management

Safety Climate

Stress Recognition

Perception of Unit Management

Safety Climate

Working Conditions

Job SatisfactionTeam Work

Climate

Job Satisfaction

Safety Climate

Stress Recognition

Sample

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Sample-De-briefer tool

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Home work

De-briefer (Group activity without dept managers)

•Identify a specific area of concern.•Select one or two items.•Provide insights and recommendations.

•Foster actionable ideas for improvement.

Page 34: Safety Attitudes Questionnaire- a way to measure “culture of safety”

Culture of Safety is a journey

•Takes as long as 5 years to develop a culture of safety that is felt throughout an organization. (Ginsburg et.al 2005)

•Need Patience, Perseverance, Commitment & Engagement.

Ginsburg, L., P. G. Norton, A. Casebeer, and S. Lewis. 2005. ‘‘An Educational Intervention to Enhance Nurse Leaders’ Perceptions of Patient Safety Culture.’’ Health Services Research 40 (4): 997–1020.

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Thank You

Contacts:[email protected]

050-9211649