The Correlation Between Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Safety Culture and Quality of Care.

dc.contributor.author

Profit, Jochen

dc.contributor.author

Sharek, Paul J

dc.contributor.author

Cui, Xin

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Nisbet, Courtney C

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Thomas, Eric J

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Tawfik, Daniel S

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Lee, Henry C

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Draper, David

dc.contributor.author

Sexton, J Bryan

dc.date.accessioned

2021-09-01T14:02:16Z

dc.date.available

2021-09-01T14:02:16Z

dc.date.issued

2020-12

dc.date.updated

2021-09-01T14:02:16Z

dc.description.abstract

Objectives

Key validated clinical metrics are being used individually and in aggregate (Baby-MONITOR) to monitor the performance of neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). The degree to which perceptions of key components of safety culture, safety climate, and teamwork are related to aspects of NICU quality of care is poorly understood. The objective of this study was to test whether NICU performance on key clinical metrics correlates with caregiver perceptions of safety culture.

Study design

Cross-sectional study of 6253 very low-birth-weight infants in 44 NICUs. We measured clinical quality via the Baby-MONITOR and its nine risk-adjusted and standardized subcomponents (antenatal corticosteroids, hypothermia, pneumothorax, healthcare-associated infection, chronic lung disease, retinopathy screen, discharge on any human milk, growth velocity, and mortality). A voluntary sample of 2073 of 3294 eligible professional caregivers provided ratings of safety and teamwork climate using the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire. We examined NICU-level variation across clinical and safety culture ratings and conducted correlation analysis of these dimensions.

Results

We found significant variation in clinical and safety culture metrics across NICUs. Neonatal intensive care unit teamwork and safety climate ratings were correlated with absence of healthcare-associated infection (r = 0.39 [P = 0.01] and r = 0.29 [P = 0.05], respectively). None of the other clinical metrics, individual or composite, were significantly correlated with teamwork or safety climate.

Conclusions

Neonatal intensive care unit teamwork and safety climate were correlated with healthcare-associated infections but not with other quality metrics. Linkages to clinical measures of quality require additional research.
dc.identifier

01209203-202012000-00035

dc.identifier.issn

1549-8417

dc.identifier.issn

1549-8425

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23680

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

dc.relation.ispartof

Journal of patient safety

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10.1097/pts.0000000000000546

dc.subject

Humans

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Cross-Sectional Studies

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Safety Management

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Pregnancy

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Adult

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Infant, Newborn

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Intensive Care Units, Neonatal

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Quality of Health Care

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Female

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Male

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Young Adult

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Surveys and Questionnaires

dc.title

The Correlation Between Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Safety Culture and Quality of Care.

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.begin-page

e310

pubs.end-page

e316

pubs.issue

4

pubs.organisational-group

School of Medicine

pubs.organisational-group

Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, General Psychiatry

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Duke

pubs.organisational-group

Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

pubs.organisational-group

Clinical Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

16

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