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1.
BMC Health Serv Res ; 17(1): 464, 2017 07 06.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28683748

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: In 2009, the Dutch Health Care Inspectorate (IGZ) observed several serious risks to safety involving medication within elderly care facilities. However, by 2011, high risks had been reduced in almost all the organisations we visited. And yet the IGZ analysed too the alarming increase in the number of incidents arising in the self-reported national indicator of medication safety between 2009 and 2010. The aim of this study was to understand the factors that can explain this contradiction between the increase in self-reported medication incidents and the observation of the IGZ in reducing the risks to medication safety through supervision. METHODS: We interviewed health care professionals of ten care facilities, visited by the IGZ, who were involved in, or responsible for, the improvement of medication safety in their institutions. As outcome measures we used the rate of medication safety risk per facility; the perceptions of the participant with regard to the reports of medication incidents; the level of medication safety of the facility; the measures used to improve medication safety; and the supervision of medication safety. This was a mixed methods study, qualitative in that we used semi-structured interviews, and quantitative, by calculating risks for the different organisations we visited. The findings from both study methods resulted in a comprehensive view and an in-depth understanding of this contradiction. RESULTS: The contradiction between the increase in self-reported medication incidents and the observation of reduced risks was explained by three themes: activities designed to improve medication safety, the reporting of medication incidents, and, lastly, the impact of supervision. The focus of the IGZ on issues of medication safety stimulated most elderly care facilities to reduce medication risks. Also, a change in the culture of reporting incidents caused an increase in the number of reported incidents. CONCLUSIONS: Supervision contributed to an improvement in actions geared towards reducing the risks associated with the safety of medication. It also increased a willingness to report such incidents. The more incidents reported are therefore not necessarily a sign of an increase in the risks, but can also be considered as a sign of a safer culture.


Sujet(s)
Maisons de retraite médicalisées/organisation et administration , Erreurs médicales/prévention et contrôle , Erreurs médicales/tendances , Maisons de repos/organisation et administration , Gestion du risque/tendances , Sujet âgé , Agences gouvernementales , Personnel de santé , Humains , Entretiens comme sujet , Soins de longue durée , Pays-Bas , Gestion de la sécurité
2.
Qual Saf Health Care ; 19(5): e24, 2010 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20577001

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Patient satisfaction is one of the relevant indicators of quality of care; however, measuring patient satisfaction had been criticised. A major criticism is that many instruments are not reliable and/or valid. The instruments should have enough discriminative power for benchmarking of the results. OBJECTIVE: To develop a "core questionnaire for the assessment of patient satisfaction in academic hospitals" (COPS) that is reliable and appropriate for benchmarking patient satisfaction results. RESEARCH DESIGN: The development of COPS, the testing of its psychometric quality and its use in eight Dutch academic hospitals in three national comparative studies in 2003, 2005 and 2007 are described in this study. Results were reported only if they were significant (p<0.05) and relevant (also Cohen d>0.2). RESULTS: The questionnaire was returned in 2003 by 40,678 patients (77,450 sent, 53%) and by 40,248 patients (75,423 sent, 53%) in 2005. In 2007, the questionnaire was returned by 45,834 patients (87,137, 53%). The six dimensions have good Cronbach α's, varying from 0.79 to 0.88.The results of every item were reported to the individual hospital. A benchmark overview showed the overall comparison of all specialties of the eight hospitals for the clinic and outpatient departments. The 2007 measurement showed relevant differences in satisfaction on two dimensions in the clinical setting. CONCLUSIONS: COPS is shown to be a feasible and reliable instrument to measure the satisfaction of patients in Dutch academic hospitals. It allows comparison of hospitals and gives benchmark information on a hospital as well as data on specialty levels and previous measurements, including best practices.


Sujet(s)
Centres hospitaliers universitaires , Satisfaction des patients , Enquêtes et questionnaires , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Pays-Bas , Psychométrie/instrumentation
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