Bibliography

Safer Culture » Bibliography

  • Allard, J., Bleakley, A., Hobbs, A. & Coombes, L. (2011). Pre-surgery briefings and safety          climate in the operating theatre.  BMJ Quality and Safety, 20, 711-717.
  • Ashcroft, D. M., Morecroft, C., Parker, D., & Noyce, P. R. (2005). Safety culture assessment in community pharmacy: development, face validity, and feasibility of the Manchester Patient Safety Assessment Framework. BMJ Quality & Safety14(6), 417-421.
  • Ausserhofer, D., Anderson, R. A., Colón-Emeric, C., & Schwendimann, R. (2013). First Evidence on the Validity and Reliability of the Safety Organizing Scale–Nursing Home Version (SOS-NH). Journal of the American Medical Directors Association14(8), 616-622.
  • Ausserhofer, D., Schubert, M., Blegen, M., De Geest, S., & Schwendimann, R. (2013). Validity and reliability on three European language versions of the Safety Organizing Scale. International journal for quality in health care25(2), 157-166.
  • Avramchuk, A. S., & McGuire, S. J. (2018). Patient Safety Climate: A Study of Southern California Healthcare Organizations. Journal of Healthcare Management63(3), 175-192.
  • Bennett, P. N., Ockerby, C., Stinson, J., Willcocks, K., & Chalmers, C. (2014). Measuring hospital falls prevention safety climate. Contemporary nurse47(1-2), 27-35.
  • Benzer, J. K., Meterko, M., & Singer, S. J. (2017). The patient safety climate in healthcare organizations (PSCHO) survey: Short‐form development. Journal of evaluation in clinical practice23(4), 853-859.
  • Birkmeyer,  N. J., Finks, J. F., Greenberg, C. K., McVeigh, A., English, W. J., Carlin, A., … ,
  • Birkmeyer, J. D. (2013).  Safety culture and complications after bariatric surgery.  Annuals of Surgery, 257(2), 260-265.
  • Birnbach, D.J. & Salas, E. (2008). Can medical simulation and team training reduce errors in labor and delivery?  Anesthesiology Clinics, 26, 159-168.
  • Bisbey, T. M., Kilcullen, M. P., Thomas, E. J, Ottosen, M. J., Tsao, K., & Salas, E. (2019).  Safety culture:  An integration of existing models and a framework for understanding its development.  Human Factors, doi: 10.1177/0018720819868878. [Epub ahead of print]
  • Botti, M., Bucknall, T., Cameron, P., Johnstone, M. J., Redley, B., Evans, S., & Jeffcott, S.(2009). Examining communication and team performance during clinical handover in a complex environment: the private sector post‐anaesthetic care unit. Medical Journal of Australia190, 157-160
  • Capitulo, K. L. (2009). Addressing disruptive behavior by implementing a code of professionalism to transform hospital culture. Nurse Leader, 7(2), 38-43.
  • Catchpole, K. & Wiegmann, D. (2012). Understanding safety and performance in the cardiac operating room: From ‘sharp end’ to ‘blunt end’. BMJ Quality & Safety, 21, 807-809.
  • Castle, N. G., Wagner, L. M., Perera, S., Ferguson, J. C., & Handler, S. M. (2010). Assessing resident safety culture in nursing homes: using the nursing home survey on resident safety. Journal of patient safety6(2), 59.
  • Center for Disease Control and Prevention. (2020). Pregnancy-related deaths. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC. https://www.cdc.gov/maternal-mortality/php/data-research/index.html
  • Desmedt, M., Bergs, J., Willaert, B., Vlayen, A., Hellings, J., Schrooten, W., … & Vandijck, D. (2018). The SCOPE-PC instrument for assessing patient safety culture in primary care: a psychometric evaluation. Acta Clinica Belgica, 73(2), 91-99.
  • Donnelly, L. F., Dickerson, J. M., Goodfriend, M. A., & Muething, S. E. (2009). Improving patient safety: effects of a safety program on performance and culture in a department of radiology. American Journal of Roentgenology193(1), 165-171.
  • Dupree, E., Anderson, R., McEvoy, M. D. & Brodman, M. (2011). Professionalism: A necessary ingredient in a culture of safety. The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety, 31(10), 447-55.
  • Earle, D., Betti, D. & Scala, E. (2017). Development of a rapid response plan for intraoperative emergencies: The circulate, scrub, and technical assistance team.  The American Journal of Surgery, 213, 181-186.
  • Elixhauser, A. & Wier, L. M. (2011). Complicating conditions of pregnancy and childbirth, 2008. U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality: Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project. https://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/statbriefs/sb113.pdf
  • Etchegaray, J. M., & Thomas, E. J. (2012). Comparing two safety culture surveys: safety attitudes questionnaire and hospital survey on patient safety. BMJ Qual Saf21(6), 490-498.
  • Frankel, A., Grillo, S. P., Baker, E. G., Huber, C. N., Abookire, S., Grenham, M., …, Gandhi, T. (2005). Patient safety Leadership WalkRounds at Partners Healthcare: learning from Implementation. Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety, 31(8), 423-437.
  • Friedman, A. M., Campbell, M. L., Kline, C. R., Wiesner, S., D’Alton, M. E., Shields, L E. (2018).  Implementing obstetric early warning systems.  American Journal of Perinatology, 8(2), 79-84.
  • Gorman, P. N., O’Malley, J. P., & Fagnan, L. J. (2012). The relationship of self-report of quality to practice size and health information technology. The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine, 25(5), 614-624.
  • Gray J. E., Suresh, G., & Ursprung, R. (2006). Patient misidentification in the neonatal intensive care unit:  Quantification of risk.  Pediatrics, 117(1), 43-47.
  • Gupta, R., Steers, N., Moriates, C., & Ong, M. (2019). Association between Hospitalist Productivity Payments and High-Value Care Culture. Journal of Hospital Medicine14, 16-21.
  • Halbesleben, J. R., Wakefield, B. J., Wakefield, D. S., & Cooper, L. B. (2008). Nurse burnout and patient safety outcomes: nurse safety perception versus reporting behavior. Western Journal of Nursing Research30(5), 560-577.
  • Hanley, D., Abele, D., Alley, A. J., Smith, K., Gaden, N. W. & Bittner, N. P. (2106). Creating a culture of safety through integration of an early warning system.  Journal of Nursing Administration, 46(2), 63-68.
  • Hatoun, J., Chan, J. A., & Yaksic, E. (2017). A systematic review of patient safety measures in adult primary care. American Journal of Medicine Quarterly, 32(3), 237-245.
  • Haynes, A. B., Weiser, T. G., Berry, W. R., Lipsitz, S. R., Breizat, A. S., Dellinger, E. P., …,
  • Gawande, A. A. (2010). Changes in safety attitude and relationship to decreased postoperative morbidity and mortality following implementation of a checklist-based surgical safety intervention.    BMJ Quality and Safety, 20, 102-107.
  • Hodgen, A., Ellis, L., Churruca, K., & Bierbaum, M. (2017). Safety culture assessment in health care: a review of the literature on safety culture assessment modes. Sydney: Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care.
  • Institute of Medicine. (2000). To err is human: Building a safer health system.  Washington, DC: The National Academies Press
  • Institute of Medicine. (2001). Crossing the quality chasm: A new health system for the 21st century.  Washington, DC: The National Academies Press
  • Jia, P. L., Zhang, L. H., Zhang, M. M., Zhang, L. L., Zhang, C., Qin, S. F., … & Liu, K. X. (2014). Safety culture in a pharmacy setting using a pharmacy survey on patient safety culture: a cross-sectional study in China. BMJ open4(6), e004904.
  • Johnston, M. J., Arora, S., King, D., & Darzi, A. (2018). Improving the quality of ward-based surgical care with a human factors intervention bundle. Annals of surgery267(1), 73-80.
  • Johnson, H. L. & Kimsey, D. (2012). Patient safety: Break the silence.  AORN Journal, 95(5),591-601. The Joint Commission. (2017). Sentinel Event Alert, Issue 57: The essential role of leadership in developing a safety culture.  https://www.jointcommission.org/sea_issue_57/.
  • Kacmar, R. M. (2017).  Safety interventions on the labor and delivery unit.  Obstetric and Gynecological Anesthesia, 30(3), 287-293.
  • Kirk, S., Parker, D., Claridge, T., Esmail, A., & Marshall, M. (2007). Patient safety culture in primary care: developing a theoretical framework for practical use. BMJ Qual Saf16, 313-320.
  • Khoshbin, A., Lingard, L., Wright, J. G. (2009). Evaluation of preoperative and perioperative operating room briefings at the Hospital for Sick Children. Canadian Journal of Surgery, 52(4), 309–315.
  • Kristensen, S., Christensen, K. B., Jaquet, A., Møller Beck, C., Sabroe, S., Bartels, P., & Mainz, (2016). Strengthening leadership as a catalyst for enhanced patient safety culture: A repeated cross-sectional experimental study. BMJ Open, 6(5), 1-10.
  • Kugelman, A., Inbar-Sanado, E., & Shinwell, E. S.  (2008). Iatrogenesis in neonatal intensive care units: Observational and interventional, prospective, multicenter study. Pediatrics, 122(3), 550-555.
  • Larramendy-Magnin, S., Anthoine, E., L’Heude, B., Leclère, B., & Moret, L. (2019). Refining the medical student safety attitudes and professionalism survey (MSSAPS): adaptation and assessment of patient safety perception of French medical residents. BMC medical education19(1), 222.
  • Lawton, R., O’hara, J. K., Sheard, L., Reynolds, C., Cocks, K., Armitage, G., & Wright, J. (2015). Can staff and patient perspectives on hospital safety predict harm-free care? An analysis of staff and patient survey data and routinely collected outcomes. BMJ Qual Saf24(6), 369-376.
  • Lee, H. Y., Hahm, M. I., & Lee, S. G. (2018). Undergraduate medical students’ perceptions and intentions regarding patient safety during clinical clerkship. BMC medical education18(1), 66.
  • Leotsakos, A., Zheng, H., Croteau, R., Loeb, Jerod, M., Sherman, H., …, Munier, B. (2014). Standardization in patient safety: the WHO High 5s project.  International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 26(2), 109-116.
  • Liao, J. M., Etchegaray, J. M., Williams, S. T., Berger, D. H., Bell, S. K., & Thomas, E. J. (2014). Assessing medical students’ perceptions of patient safety: the medical student safety attitudes and professionalism survey. Academic Medicine89(2), 343-351.
  • MacDorman, M. F., Declercq, E., Cabral, H., & Morton, C. (2016).  Recent increases in the U.S. maternal mortality rate:  Disentangling trends from measurement issues.  Obstetrics and Gynecology, 128(3), 447-455.
  • Makary, M. A. & Daniel, M. (2016). Medical error-the third leading cause of death in the US. BMJ 353(2), 139.
  • Mardon, R. E., Khanna, K., Sorra, J., Dyer, N., & Famolaro, T. (2010).  Exploring relationships between hospital patient safety culture and adverse events.  Journal of Patient Safety, 6(4), 226-232.
  • Marshall, D. (2009). Crew resource management: From patient safety to high reliability. Safer     Healthcare Partners: Denver, Colorado
  • McQuaid-Hanson, E. & Pian-Smith, M. C. (2017). Huddles and debriefings: Improving communication on labor and delivery.  Anesthesiology Clinic, 35(1), 59-67.
  • Meddings, J., Reichert, H., Greene, M. T., … & Saint, S. (2017). Evaluation of the association between Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPS) measures and catheter-associated infections: results of two national collaboratives. BMJ Qual Saf26, 226-235.
  • Meurling, L., Hedman, L., Sandahl, C., Fellander-Tsai, L. & Wallin, C. J. (2013). Systematic simulation-based training in a Swedish intensive care unit: A diverse response among critical care professionals.  BMJ Quality and Safety, 22, 485-494.
  • Mira, J. J., Navarro, I. M., Guilabert, M., Poblete, R., Franco, A. L., Jiménez, P., … & Valle, Y. D. D. (2015). A Spanish-language patient safety questionnaire to measure medical and nursing students’ attitudes and knowledge. Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública, 38, 110-119.
  • Moss, S. (2017). Creating a culture of success- Using the magnet recognition program as a framework to engage nurses in an Australian healthcare facility. The Journal of Nursing Administration, 47 (1), 116-122. The National Patient Safety Foundation. Free from Harm: Accelerating Patient Safety Movement Fifteen Years after To Err is Human. 2015. Available at: www.npsf.org. Accessed February 25, 2016
  • O’Leary, K. J., Wayne, D. B., Haviley, C., Slade, M. E., Lee, J., & Williams, M. V. (2010). Improving teamwork: impact of structured interdisciplinary rounds on a medical teaching unit. Journal of general internal medicine25(8), 826-832.
  • Olson, D.  P., Fields, B. G. & Windish, D. M. (2015).  Geographic localization of housestaff inpatients improves patient–provider communication, satisfaction, and culture of safety. Journal for Healthcare Quality, 37(6), 363–373.
  • Ornelas, M. D., Pais, D., & Sousa, P. (2016). Patient safety culture in Portuguese primary healthcare. Qual Prim Care, 24(5), 214-5.
  • Paine, L. A., Rosenstein, B. J., Sexton, J. B., Kent, P., Holzmueller, C. G. & Pronovost, P. J. (2011). Republished paper: Assessing and improving safety culture throughout an academic medical center: A prospective cohort study. Postgraduate Medical Journal, 87, 428-435.
  • Parker, D. (2009). Managing risk in healthcare: understanding your safety culture using the Manchester Patient Safety Framework (MaPSaF). Journal of nursing management17, 218-222.
  • Pettker, C. M., Thung, S. F., Raab, C. A., Donohue, K. P, Copel, J. A., Lockwood, C. J., Funai, F. (2011). A comprehensive obstetrics patient safety program improves safety climate and culture. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 204:216, e1-6.
  • Profit, J., Etchegaray, J., Petersen, L. A., Sexton, J. B., Hysong, S. J., Mei, M., & Thomas, E. J. (2012). The Safety Attitudes Questionnaire as a tool for benchmarking safety culture in the NICU. Archives of Disease in Childhood-Fetal and Neonatal Edition97(2), F127-F132.
  • Pronovost, P. J., Ravitz, A. D., Stoll, R. A., & Kennedy, S. B. (2015). Transforming patient safety: A sector-wide systems approach. Report of the Wish Patient Safety Forum http://www.wish.org.qa/research/reports/patient-safety-en.
  • Ramoni, R., Walji, M. F., Tavares, A., White, J., Tokede, O., Vaderhobli, R., & Kalenderian, E. (2014). Open wide: looking into the safety culture of dental school clinics. Journal of dental education, 78(5), 745-756.
  • Reiman, T., Silla, I., & Pietikäinen, E. (2013). The validity of the Nordic patient safety culture questionnaire (TUKU). International Journal of Risk & Safety in Medicine25(3), 169-184.
  • Reiman, T., & Oedewald, P. (2004). Measuring maintenance culture and maintenance core task with CULTURE-questionnaire––a case study in the power industry. Safety Science42(9), 859-889.
  • Report from Nine Maternal Mortality Review Committees (2018). https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/51660
  • Riley, W., Davis, S., Miller, K., Hansen, H., Sainfort, F. & Sweet, R. (2011). Didactic and simulation nontechnical skills team training to improve perinatal patient outcomes in a community hospital.  The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety, 37(8), 357-364.
  • Savage, C., Gaffney, F. A., Hussain-Alkhateeb, L., Ackheim, P. O., Henricson, G., Antoniadou, I….Harenstam, K. P. (2017). Safer paediatric surgical teams: A 5-year evaluation of crew resource management implementation and outcomes.  International Journal for Quality in Healthcare, 29(6), 853-860.
  • Schwendimann, R., Milne, J., Frush, K., Ausserhofer, D., Frankel, A., Sexton, J. B. (2013).  A closer look at associations between hospital Leadership WalkRounds and patient safety climate and risk reduction: A cross-sectional study.  American Journal of Hospital Quality, 28(5), 414-421.
  • Sexton, J. B., Sharek, P. J., Thomas, E. J., … & Profit, J. (2014). Exposure to Leadership
  • WalkRounds in neonatal intensive care units is associated with a better patient safety culture and less caregiver burnout. BMJ Qual Saf23, 814-822.
  • Sexton, J. B., Adair, K. C., Leonard, M. W., … Frankel, A. S. (2018). Providing feedback following Leadership WalkRounds is associated with better patient safety culture, higher employee engagement and lower burnout. BMJ Qual Saf27, 261-270.
  • Sexton, J. B., Helmreich, R. L., Neilands, T. B., Rowan, K., Vella, K., Boyden, J., … , Thomas, J. (2006). The safety attitudes questionnaire: Psychometric properties, benchmarking data, and emerging research. BMC Health Service Resources, 3(6), 44.
  • Shepard, L.H.  (2011). Creating a foundation for a just culture workplace nursing. NURSE,  41(8), 46-8.
  • Singer, S., Lin, S., Falwell, A., Gaba, D., & Baker, L. (2009). Relationship of safety climate and safety performance in hospitals. Health services research44(2p1), 399-421.
  • Singer, S. J. & Vogus, T. J. (2013).  Safety climate research: Taking stock and looking forward.  BMJ Journal of Quality and Safety, 22, 1-4.
  • Singh, A., Guleria, K., Vaid, N. B. & Jain, S. (2016). Evaluation of maternal early obstetric warning system (MEOWS chart) as a predictor of obstetric morbidity: A prospective observational study. European Journal of Obstetric and Gynecological Reproductive Biology, 207, 11-17.
  • Sorra JS, Dyer N. Multilevel psychometric properties of the AHRQ Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture. BMC Health Serv Res 2010 Jul 8;10:199.
  • Starmer, A. J, Spector, N. D., Srivastava, R., West, D.C., Rosenbluth, G. A., Allen, A.D., …,
  • Landrigan, C. P. (2014). Changes in medical errors after implementation of a handoff program:  I-PASS study group.  New England Journal of Medicine, 371(19), 1803-1812.
  • Taylor, J. A., Dominici, F., Agnew, J., Gerwin, D., Morlock, L., & Miller, M. R. (2012). Do nurse and patient injuries share common antecedents? An analysis of associations with safety climate and working conditions. BMJ Qual Saf21(2), 101-111.
  • Thomas, E. J., Sexton, J. B., Neilands, T. B., Frankel, A., Helmreich, R. L. (2005). The effect of executive walk rounds on nurse safety climate attitudes: A randomized trial of clinical units. BMC Health Services Research, 5(28), 1-9.
  • van Melle, M. A., van Stel, H. F., Poldervaart, J. M., de Wit, N. J., & Zwart, D. L. (2018). Validation of a questionnaire measuring transitional patient safety climate indicated differences in transitional patient safety climate between primary and secondary care. Journal of clinical epidemiology94, 114-121.
  • Valley, A. M. & Stallones, A. L. (2017). Effect of mindfulness-based stress reduction training on
  • health care worker safety: A randomized waitlist controlled trial.   Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 59(10), 935-941.
  • Verbakel, N. J., Zwart, D. L., Langelaan, M., Verheij, T. J., & Wagner, C. (2013). Measuring safety culture in Dutch primary care: psychometric characteristics of the SCOPE-PC questionnaire. BMC health services research13(1), 354.
  • Verschoor, K. N., Taylor, A., Northway, T. L., Hudson, D. G., Van Stolk, D. E., Shearer, K. J….Miller, G. (2007). Creating a safety culture at the children’s and women’s health centre of British Columbia.  Journal of Pediatric Nursing, 22(1), 81-86.
  • Vogus, T. J., & Sutcliffe, K. M. (2007). The Safety Organizing Scale: development and validation of a behavioral measure of safety culture in hospital nursing units. Medical care, 46-54.
  • Wagner, A., Hammer, A., Manser, T., Martus, P., Sturm, H., & Rieger, M. (2018). Do
  • Occupational and patient safety culture in hospitals share predictors in the field of psychosocial working conditions? Findings from a cross-sectional study in German university hospitals. International journal of environmental research and public health15(10), 2131.
  • Wagner, A., Rieger, M. A., Manser, T., Sturm, H., Hardt, J., Martus, P., … & Hammer, A. (2019). Healthcare professionals’ perspectives on working conditions, leadership, and safety climate: a cross-sectional study. BMC health services research19(1), 53.
  • Watts, B. V., Percarpio, K., West, P., & Mills, P. D. (2010). Use of the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire as a measure in patient safety improvement. Journal of Patient Safety6, 206-209.
  • Weaver, S. J., Rosen, M. A., DiazGranados, D., Lazzara, E. H., Lyons, R., Salas, E., …King, H. (2010). Does teamwork improve performance in the operating room? A multilevel evaluation. The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety, 36(3), 133-142.
  • Westat R, Martha F, Joann S. Pharmacy survey on patient safety culture: user’s guide. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2012. (Prepared by Rockville, MD 20850 Contract No. HHSA290200710024C). AHRQ Publication No. 12(13)-0085. https:// www.ahrq.gov/professionals/quality-patient-safety/ patientsafetyculture/pharmacy/index.html
  • Whittington, J. W., Nolan, K., Lewis, N. & Torres, T. (2015). Pursuing the triple aim: The first seven years. The Milbank Quarterly, 93(2), 263-300.
  • Woodhouse, K. D., Volz, E., Maity, A., Gabriel, P. E., Solberg, T. D., Bergendahl, H. W., &
  • Hahn, S. M. (2016). Journey toward high reliability: A comprehensive safety program to improve quality of care and safety culture in a large, multisite radiation oncology department. Journal of oncology practice12(5), e603-e612.
  • Woodward, H. I., Oliver, T., Mytton, C. L., Yardley, I. E., Ellis, B. M., Rutter, P., …., Wu, A. (2010). What have we learned about interventions to reduce medical errors? Annual Review of Public Health, 31(1), 479-497.
  • Zwart, D. L., Langelaan, M., van de Vooren, R. C., Kuyvenhoven, M. M., Kalkman, C. J., Verheij, T. J., & Wagner, C. (2011). Patient safety culture measurement in general practice. Clinimetric properties of ‘SCOPE’. BMC family practice12(1), 117.