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Nurses¡¯ Experience of Failing to Report Patient Safety Incidents in Long-Term Care Hospitals

°£È£¿Í Çõ½Å 2024³â 28±Ç 1È£ p.51 ~ 61
KMID : 0928020240280010051
¹ÚÇöÁÖ ( Park Hyun-Ju ) - 

±èºÀÈ­ ( Kim Bong-Hwa ) - 
ÀÌÀºÁÖ ( Lee Eun-Joo ) - 

Abstract

Purpose: The aims of this study were to identify and understand meaning and nature of nurses¡¯ experiences of failing to report patient safety incidents working in long-term care hospitals.

Methods: The participants in the study were 7 females and 1 male who were nurses working at long-term care hospitals located in P and G city and had experience of failing to report patient safety incidents. Data were collected from March to December in 2020. Individual in-depth interviews were conducted with the research participants. The data were analyzed by phenomenological method suggested by Colaizzi.

Results: Thirteen thematic collections were derived, and these were further integrated into five categories with more abstract and comprehensive meanings. The five categories were ¡®a culture of passive response to patient safety¡¯, ¡®burden of reporting patient safety incidents¡¯, ¡®different values regarding elderly care¡¯, ¡®lack of awareness about patient safety incidents reporting¡¯ and ¡®lack of patient safety management system¡¯

Conclusion: The results of this study can be used as meaningful data for developing safety management strategies that can improve patient safety culture and incidents reporting rate in long-term care hospitals by understanding nurses¡¯ experience of failing to report patient safety incidents in long-term care hospital.
KeyWords
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Long-term care, Nurse, Patient safety, Phenomenological approach
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