Safety attitudes in hospital emergency departments: a systematic review
Date
Authors
Alzahrani, Naif
Jones, Russell
Rizwan, Amir
Abdel-Latif, Mohamed E.
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Emerald Group Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to perform and report a systematic review of published research on
patient safety attitudes of health staff employed in hospital emergency departments (EDs).
Design/methodology/approach – An electronic search was conducted of PsychINFO, ProQuest, MEDLINE,
EMBASE, PubMed and CINAHL databases. The review included all studies that focussed on the safety attitudes of
professional hospital staff employed in EDs.
Findings – Overall, the review revealed that the safety attitudes of ED health staff are generally low,
especially on teamwork and management support and among nurses when compared to doctors. Conversely,
two intervention studies showed the effectiveness of team building interventions on improving the safety
attitudes of health staff employed in EDs.
Research limitations/implications – Six studies met the inclusion criteria, however, most of the studies
demonstrated low to moderate methodological quality.
Originality/value – Teamwork, communication and management support are central to positive safety
attitudes. Teamwork training can improve safety attitudes. Given that EDs are the “front-line” of hospital
care and patients within EDs are especially vulnerable to medical errors, future research should focus on the
safety attitudes of medical staff employed in EDs and its relationship to medical errors.
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International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution License
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