Seung Eun Lee | 2 Articles |
Purpose
To examine the relationship between nurse-perceived patient safety culture and patient safety grade in healthcare organizations. Methods: A cross-sectional, correlational study design was used. An online survey was conducted with nurses in three tertiary hospitals in Korea who provided direct care to patients. Data were analyzed using Pearson correlation coefficients and ordinal logistic regression. Results: A total of 526 nurses completed the questionnaire. Among patient safety culture dimensions, staffing and work pace, reporting patient safety events, hospital management support for patient safety, handoffs and information exchange, organizational learningcontinuous improvement, and unit manager support for patient safety were significant predictors for patient safety grade. Conclusion: Efforts should be made to create and enhance patient safety culture in healthcare organizations. This study showed that staffing and work pace were the strongest predictors of patient safety grade, indicating that adequate nurse staffing is important to handle workloads and improve patient safety. Our study also demonstrated the importance of hospital management and unit manager support for patient safety. Therefore, we suggest developing a leadership program for hospital administrators and unit managers, to help them develop the necessary leadership skills for creating a culture of safety in healthcare organizations. Citations Citations to this article as recorded by
Purpose
To describe clinical nurses’ experience and grievance in an online community using a co-occurrence network and topic modeling. Methods: We analyzed posts from Nurscape, which is the largest online community for nurses in Korea. After extracting posts using web scrapping, text preprocessing was done to detect nouns. In a visualization phase, co-occurrence network analysis and latent dirichlet allocation-based topic modeling were applied. Results: A total of 13,200 posts were analyzed. The co-occurrence network’s core keywords were newly graduate nurse, general ward, career, turnover, and grievance. The topic modeling showed four topics: (1) ‘Clinical practice-related difficulties’ described clinical hardships, such as the heavy workload of nurses; (2) ‘Concerns about resignation’ incorporated keywords asking for advice on resignation; (3) ‘Searching for information on employment/reemployment’ focused on the working conditions or working climate of a specific hospital; and (4) ‘Organizational action call’ captured the voices urging organized actions to improve nurses’ work environment. Conclusion: Clinical nurses share experiences through the online community and seek advice or information and urge organizational action. Professional nursing organizations should identify and deal with problems that nurses are currently facing. The results of this study can contribute to establishing the policy direction of nursing organizations. Citations Citations to this article as recorded by
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