Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Huw Davies, S. Nutley, R. Mannion (2000)
Organisational culture and quality of health careQuality in Health Care, 9
S. Handler, N. Castle, S. Studenski, S. Perera, D. Fridsma, D. Nace, J. Hanlon (2006)
Patient safety culture assessment in the nursing homeQuality and Safety in Health Care, 15
T. Scott, R. Mannion, H. Davies, M. Marshall (2003)
The quantitative measurement of organizational culture in health care: a review of the available instruments.Health services research, 38 3
G. Wunderlich, P. Kohler (2001)
Improving the Quality of Long-Term Care
P. Pronovost, Bryan Sexton (2005)
Assessing safety culture: guidelines and recommendationsQuality and Safety in Health Care, 14
M. Fishbein, I. Ajzen (1977)
Belief, Attitude, Intention, and Behavior: An Introduction to Theory and ResearchContemporary Sociology, 6
R. Gershon, P. Stone, S. Bakken, E. Larson (2004)
Measurement of Organizational Culture and Climate in HealthcareJONA: The Journal of Nursing Administration, 34
O. Intrator, Nicholas Castle, Vincent Mor (1999)
Facility characteristics associated with hospitalization of nursing home residents: results of a national study.Medical care, 37 3
J. Mohr, H. Abelson, P. Barach (2002)
Creating Effective Leadership for Improving Patient SafetyQuality Management in Health Care, 11
C. Harrington, J. Swan (2003)
Nursing Home Staffing, Turnover, and Case MixMedical Care Research and Review, 60
J. Straker (1999)
Reliability of OSCAR occupancy, census and staff data : a comparison with the Ohio Department of Health annual survey of long-term care facilities
M. Hillmer, W. Wodchis, S. Gill, G. Anderson, P. Rochon (2005)
Nursing Home Profit Status and Quality of Care: Is There Any Evidence of an Association?Medical Care Research and Review, 62
J. Cooper (2003)
Developing a culture of safety.Biomedical instrumentation & technology, 37 3
F. Guldenmund (2000)
The nature of safety culture: a review of theory and researchSafety Science, 34
J. Lucas, T. Avi-Itzhak, Joanne Robinson, Catherine Morris, M. Koren, S. Reinhard (2005)
Continuous quality improvement as an innovation: which nursing facilities adopt it?The Gerontologist, 45 1
Zhanlian Feng, P. Katz, O. Intrator, J. Karuza, V. Mor (2005)
Physician and nurse staffing in nursing homes: the role and limitations of the Online Survey Certification and Reporting (OSCAR) system.Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 6 1
S. Zeger, K. Liang (1992)
An overview of methods for the analysis of longitudinal data.Statistics in medicine, 11 14-15
J. Banaszak-Holl, W. Berta, Dilys Bowman, Joel Baum, W. Mitchell (2002)
The rise of human service chains: Antecedents to acquisitions and their effects on the quality of care in US nursing homesManagerial and Decision Economics, 23
M. Kadzielski, Catherine Martin (2002)
Assessing medical error in health care. Developing a "culture of safety".Health progress, 83 6
M. Cooper (2000)
Towards a model of safety cultureSafety Science, 36
S. Parsons, W. Simmons, K. Penn, Melanie Furlough (2003)
Determinants of satisfaction and turnover among nursing assistants. The results of a statewide survey.Journal of gerontological nursing, 29 3
W. Thomas (2003)
Evolution of EdenJournal of Social Work in Long-Term Care, 2
(2000)
American College of Clinical Pharmacology Response to the Institute of Medicine Report “To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System”The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 40
P. Pronovost, Brad Weast, C. Holzmueller, B. Rosenstein, R. Kidwell, K. Haller, E. Feroli, J. Sexton, H. Rubin (2003)
Evaluation of the culture of safety: survey of clinicians and managers in an academic medical centerQuality and Safety in Health Care, 12
T. Lee (1996)
Perceptions, attitudes and behaviour : the vital elements of a safety culture, 10
J. Colla, A. Bracken, L. Kinney, W. Weeks (2005)
Measuring patient safety climate: a review of surveysQuality and Safety in Health Care, 14
Wendy Lustbader, Williams Catlett (2006)
Culture Change in Long-Term Care
W. Weeks, J. Bagian (2000)
Developing a culture of safety in the Veterans Health Administration.Effective clinical practice : ECP, 3 6
Purpose. First, the resident safety culture of nursing homes from a Nurse Aide’s perspective was compared with existing data from hospitals. Second, how the safety culture of nursing homes varied according to facility characteristics and market characteristics was examined.Methods. Data came from 72 nursing homes and 1579 Nurse Aides (response rate of 55%). From these nursing homes, Nurse Aides completed The Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPSC) instrument, a previously validated survey with 12 subscales used to assess safety culture. The nursing home scores from this instrument were compared with the hospital scores. Ordinary least squares regression was used to examine the association between nine nursing home facility characteristics and two market characteristics and the overall safety culture score.Results. All of the 12 HSOPSC subscale scores from the nursing home sample were considerably lower than the benchmark hospital scores, indicating a less well-developed safety culture. The significant facility and market characteristics from the regression analysis resembled many of those found when similar characteristics are used in examinations of quality.Conclusions. These results are important in clearly showing that the resident safety culture of Nurse Aides in many nursing homes may be poorly developed.
International Journal for Quality in Health Care – Oxford University Press
Published: Oct 7, 2006
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.