PJ Pronovost, B Weast, CG Holzmueller, BJ … - Quality and Safety in Health Care, 2003 - qshc.bmj.com Background: Despite the emphasis on patient safety in health care, few
organizations have evaluated the extent to which safety is a strategic priority
or their culture supports patient safety. In response to the Institute of ... Cited by 123 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 10 versions
SJ Singer, DM Gaba, JJ Geppert, AD Sinaiko … - Quality and Safety in Health Care, 2003 - qshc.bmj.com Design: Using a closed ended survey, respondents were questioned on 16 topics
important to a culture of safety in health care or other industries plus
demographic information. The survey was conducted by US mail (with an ... Cited by 162 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 13 versions
VF Nieva, J Sorra - Quality and Safety in Health Care, 2003 - qshc.bmj.com Increasingly, healthcare organizations are becoming aware of the importance of
transforming organizational culture in order to improve patient safety. Growing
interest in safety culture has been accompanied by the need for assessment ... Cited by 148 - Related articles - All 15 versions
- ►critcaremed.com P Pronovost, B Weast, B Rosenstein, JB … - Journal of Patient Safety, 2005 - journals.lww.com From *The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland; †Johns Hopkins
Medicine, Center for Innovations in Quality Patient Care, Baltimore, Maryland
21205; ‡319th Medical Group, Grand Forks AFB, North Dakota; and §The ... Cited by 98 - Related articles - All 2 versions
JB Colla, AC Bracken, LM Kinney, WB Weeks - Quality and Safety in Health Care, 2005 - qshc.bmj.com Results: Nine surveys were found that measured the patient safety climate of an
organization. All used Likert scales, mostly to measure attitudes of
individuals. Nearly all covered five common dimensions of patient safety ... Cited by 97 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 11 versions
ME Kho, JM Carbone, J Lucas, DJ Cook - Quality and Safety in Health Care, 2005 - qshc.bmj.com Results: The response rate was 74% (313/426). The internal consistency of the
SCSu and SCSc was 0.86 and 0.80, respectively, while the SCM performed poorly at
0.51. Because of poor internal consistency, no further analysis of the SCM ... Cited by 27 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 9 versions
DM Gaba, SJ Singer, AD Sinaiko, JD Bowen, … - Human Factors, 2003 - hfs.sagepub.com Safety in industries of high intrinsic hazard, such as aviation, military
operations, nuclear power, and health care, is known to be a prop- erty
primarily of systems rather than individuals. Organizations that perform ... Cited by 64 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 10 versions
SN Weingart, K Farbstein, RB Davis, RS … - Joint Commission journal on quality and safety, 2004 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov BACKGROUND: A culture of safety survey was used to study features of the safety
culture and their relationship with patient safety indicators. STUDY DESIGN:
Anonymous written surveys were collected from 455 of 1,027 (44%) workers at ... Cited by 44 - Related articles - BL Direct
T Scott, R Mannion, H Davies, M Marshall - Health Services Research, 2003 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov Objective. To review the quantitative instruments available to health service
researchers who want to measure culture and cultural change. Data Sources. A
literature search was conducted using Medline, Cinahl, Helmis, Psychlit, ... Cited by 119 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions
- ►bmj.com [PDF] P Pronovost, B Sexton - British Medical Journal, 2005 - qshc.bmj.com T his issue brings the 14th in the ''Heroes and Martyrs of Quality and Safety''
series. More are to come. With a new editor of this journal on board, it is a
good moment to define the content of the series. It is about peo- ... Cited by 76 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 7 versions