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Treating patients in a safe environment: a cross-sectional study of patient safety attitudes among doctors in the Gaza Strip, Palestine
by
Böttcher, Bettina
, Abuowda, Yousef
, Elnajjar, Ibrahem
, Abu-El-Noor, Mysoon
, Alaloul, Enas
, Abu-El-Noor, Nasser
, Elhout, Somaya
, Alfaqawi, Maha
in
Adult
/ Attitude of Health Personnel
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ Doctors, medical errors, Gaza strip, Palestine
/ Female
/ Health Administration
/ Health Informatics
/ Hospitals, Public
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medical equipment
/ Medical errors
/ Medical research
/ Medical Staff, Hospital - psychology
/ Medical Staff, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Middle Aged
/ Middle East
/ Nursing Research
/ Patient care
/ Patient Safety
/ Patient safety attitudes
/ Patient safety training
/ Physicians
/ Public Health
/ Public opinion
/ Research Article
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
2020
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Treating patients in a safe environment: a cross-sectional study of patient safety attitudes among doctors in the Gaza Strip, Palestine
by
Böttcher, Bettina
, Abuowda, Yousef
, Elnajjar, Ibrahem
, Abu-El-Noor, Mysoon
, Alaloul, Enas
, Abu-El-Noor, Nasser
, Elhout, Somaya
, Alfaqawi, Maha
in
Adult
/ Attitude of Health Personnel
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ Doctors, medical errors, Gaza strip, Palestine
/ Female
/ Health Administration
/ Health Informatics
/ Hospitals, Public
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medical equipment
/ Medical errors
/ Medical research
/ Medical Staff, Hospital - psychology
/ Medical Staff, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Middle Aged
/ Middle East
/ Nursing Research
/ Patient care
/ Patient Safety
/ Patient safety attitudes
/ Patient safety training
/ Physicians
/ Public Health
/ Public opinion
/ Research Article
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
2020
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Treating patients in a safe environment: a cross-sectional study of patient safety attitudes among doctors in the Gaza Strip, Palestine
by
Böttcher, Bettina
, Abuowda, Yousef
, Elnajjar, Ibrahem
, Abu-El-Noor, Mysoon
, Alaloul, Enas
, Abu-El-Noor, Nasser
, Elhout, Somaya
, Alfaqawi, Maha
in
Adult
/ Attitude of Health Personnel
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ Doctors, medical errors, Gaza strip, Palestine
/ Female
/ Health Administration
/ Health Informatics
/ Hospitals, Public
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medical equipment
/ Medical errors
/ Medical research
/ Medical Staff, Hospital - psychology
/ Medical Staff, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Middle Aged
/ Middle East
/ Nursing Research
/ Patient care
/ Patient Safety
/ Patient safety attitudes
/ Patient safety training
/ Physicians
/ Public Health
/ Public opinion
/ Research Article
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
2020
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Treating patients in a safe environment: a cross-sectional study of patient safety attitudes among doctors in the Gaza Strip, Palestine
Journal Article
Treating patients in a safe environment: a cross-sectional study of patient safety attitudes among doctors in the Gaza Strip, Palestine
2020
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Overview
Background
Patient safety is important, as in increasingly complex medical systems, the potential for unintended harm to patients also increases. This study assessed the attitudes of doctors in the Gaza Strip towards patient safety and medical error. It also explored variables that impacted their attitudes.
Methods
Doctors, working for at least 6 months in one of the four major government hospitals of the Gaza Strip, were invited to complete a 28-item, self-administered Arabic version of the Attitudes to Patient Safety Questionnaire III (APSQ-III); which assessed patient safety attitudes over nine domains, independent of the workplace.
Results
A total of 150 doctors from four government hospitals participated in this study, representing 43.5% of all 345 doctors working in the four study hospitals at the time of the study. The mean age was 36.6 (±9.7) years. The majority (72.7%) were males, 28.7% worked in surgical, 26.7% in pediatric, 23.3% in medical, 16.7% in obstetrics and gynecology, and 4.7% in other departments. Most participants (62.0%) had never received patient safety training. The overall APSQ score was 3.58 ± 0.3 (of a maximum of 5). The highest score was received by the domain “Working hours as a cause of errors” (4.16) and the lowest score by “Importance of Patient Safety in the Curriculum” (3.25). Older doctors with more professional experience had significantly higher scores than younger doctors (
p
= 0.003), demonstrating more positive attitudes toward patient safety. Furthermore, patient safety attitudes became more positive with increasing years of experience in some domains. However, no significant impact on overall APSQ scores was found by workplace, specialty or whether the participants had received previous training about patient safety.
Conclusion
Doctors in Gaza demonstrated relatively positive patient safety attitudes in areas of “team functioning” and “working hours as a cause for error”, but neutral attitudes in understanding medical error or patient safety training within the curriculum. Patient safety concepts appear to be acquired by doctors via informal learning over time in the job. Inclusion of such concepts into formal postgraduate curricula might improve patient safety attitudes among younger and less experienced doctors, support behaviour change and improve patient outcomes.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,BMC
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