The COVID-19 Pandemic and Patient Safety Culture: A Cross-Sectional Study among Community Pharmacies in Jordan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Settings
2.2. Study Instrument
2.3. Sample Size Calculation and Sampling Strategy
2.4. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.5. Questionnaire Measures
2.6. Study Endpoints
2.7. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Socio-Demographic Characteristics of the Participants
3.2. Reliability of the Questionnaire
3.3. Safety Culture Assessment across Community Pharmacies in Jordan during the COVID-19 Pandemic
4. Discussion
4.1. Study Strengths and Limitations
4.2. Implications for Future Research
4.3. Policy Implications
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parameter | N (%) | |
---|---|---|
Age (in years) | Less than 25 | 54 (14.3%) |
25 to less than 35 | 127 (33.6%) | |
35 to less than 45 | 80 (21.2%) | |
45 or older | 117 (31.0%) | |
Gender | Female | 253 (66.9%) |
Male | 125 (33.1%) | |
Education level | Bachelor of Pharmacy | 296 (78.3%) |
Bachelor of Pharm D | 11 (2.9%) | |
Postgraduate degree | 29 (7.7%) | |
Pharmacy diploma | 42 (11.1%) | |
Pharmacy location (Governorates) | Middle area, including the capital, Amman | 305 (80.7%) |
North area | 41 (10.8%) | |
South area | 32 (8.5%) | |
Pharmacy ownership type | Independent (individual) | 292 (77.2%) |
Chain pharmacy | 86 (22.8%) | |
The position in the pharmacy (Job title) | Staff pharmacist | 82 (21.7%) |
Responsible pharmacist | 119 (31.5%) | |
Pharmacy assistant | 40 (10.6%) | |
Owner pharmacist | 121 (32.0%) | |
Other | 16 (4.2%) | |
Years of practical experience in community pharmacies | Less than 3 years | 99 (26.2%) |
3 years to less than 6 years | 49 (13.0%) | |
6 years or more | 230 (60.8%) | |
Weekly working hours | Less than 16 h per week | 41 (10.8%) |
17 to 31 h per week | 54 (14.3%) | |
32 to 40 h per week | 110 (29.1%) |
Total Positive Response Rates (PRRs) of all Sections (77.3%) | PRR | |
---|---|---|
N | % | |
SECTION A: Working in this Pharmacy (section positivity) | 84.6 | |
1. Physical Space and Environment (dimension positivity): | 81.7 | |
A1 This pharmacy is well organized | 333 | 88.1 |
A5 This pharmacy is free of clutter | 285 | 75.4 |
A7 The physical layout of this pharmacy supports good workflow | 308 | 81.5 |
2. Teamwork (dimension positivity): | 90.1 | |
A2 Staff treat each other with respect | 355 | 93.9 |
A4 Staff in this pharmacy clearly understand their roles and responsibilities | 335 | 88.6 |
A9 Staff work together as an effective team | 332 | 87.8 |
3. Staff Training and Skills (dimension positivity): | 82.7 | |
A3 Technicians in this pharmacy receive the training they need to do their jobs | 301 | 79.6 |
A6 Staff in this pharmacy have the skills they need to do their jobs well | 323 | 85.4 |
A8 Staff who are new to this pharmacy receive adequate orientation | 320 | 84.7 |
A10 Staff get enough training from this pharmacy | 307 | 81.2 |
SECTION B: Communication and Work Pace (section positivity) | 70.9 | |
4. Communication Openness (dimension positivity): | 78.8 | |
B1 Staff ideas and suggestions are valued in this pharmacy | 289 | 76.5 |
B5 Staff feel comfortable asking questions when they are unsure about something | 309 | 81.7 |
B10 It is easy for staff to speak up to their supervisor/manager about patient safety concerns in this pharmacy | 295 | 78.0 |
5. Patient Counseling (dimension positivity): | 85.2 | |
B2 We encourage patients to talk to pharmacists about their medications | 329 | 87.0 |
B7 Our pharmacists spend enough time talking to patients about how to use their medications | 314 | 83.1 |
B11 Our pharmacists tell patients important information about their new prescriptions | 323 | 85.4 |
6. Staffing, Work Pressure, and Pace (dimension positivity): | 46.6 | |
B3 Staff take adequate breaks during their shifts | 226 | 59.8 |
B9 We feel rushed when processing prescriptions (R) | 99 | 26.2 |
B12 We have enough staff to handle the workload | 290 | 76.7 |
B16 Interruptions/distractions in this pharmacy (from phone calls, faxes, customers, etc.) make it difficult for staff to work accurately (R) | 89 | 23.5 |
7. Communication About Prescriptions Across Shifts (dimension positivity): | 72.4 | |
B4 We have clear expectations about exchanging important prescription information across shifts | 272 | 72.0 |
B6 We have standard procedures for communicating prescription information across shifts | 255 | 67.5 |
B14 The status of problematic prescriptions is well communicated across shifts | 294 | 77.8 |
8. Communication About Mistakes (dimension positivity): | 79.5 | |
B8 Staff in this pharmacy discuss mistakes | 308 | 81.5 |
B13 When patient safety issues occur in this pharmacy, staff discuss them | 292 | 77.2 |
B15 In this pharmacy, we talk about ways to prevent mistakes from happening again | 301 | 79.6 |
SECTION C: Patient Safety and Response to Mistakes (section positivity) | 76.4 | |
9. Response to Mistakes (dimension positivity): | 72.5 | |
C1 Staff are treated fairly when they make mistakes | 272 | 72.0 |
C4 This pharmacy helps staff learn from their mistakes rather than punishing them | 298 | 78.8 |
C7 We look at staff actions and the way we do things to understand why mistakes happen in this pharmacy | 306 | 81.0 |
C8 Staff feel like their mistakes are held against them (R) | 220 | 58.2 |
10. Organizational Learning—Continuous Improvement (dimension positivity): | 79.6 | |
C2 When a mistake happens, we try to figure out what problems in the work process led to the mistake | 315 | 83.3 |
C5 When the same mistake keeps happening, we change the way we do things | 310 | 82.0 |
C10 Mistakes have led to positive changes in this pharmacy | 278 | 73.5 |
11. Overall Perceptions of Patient Safety (dimension positivity): | 78.5 | |
C3 This pharmacy places more emphasis on sales than on patient safety (R) | 253 | 66.9 |
C6 This pharmacy is good at preventing mistakes | 318 | 84.1 |
C9 The way we do things in this pharmacy reflects a strong focus on patient safety | 319 | 84.4 |
Documenting Mistakes | * PRR | ||
---|---|---|---|
Never/Rarely N (%) | Sometimes N (%) | (Most of the Time/Always) N (%) | |
D1 When a mistake reaches the patient and could cause harm but does not, how often is it documented? | 112 (29.6%) | 100 (26.5%) | 166 (43.9%) |
D2 When a mistake reaches the patient but has no potential to harm the patient, how often is it documented? | 107 (28.3%) | 127 (33.6%) | 144 (38.1%) |
D3 When a mistake that could have harmed the patient is corrected before the medication leaves the pharmacy, how often is it documented? | 72 (19.0%) | 100 (26.5%) | 206 (54.5%) |
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Abu Assab, M.; Jaber, D.; Basheer, H.; Abu Assab, H.; Al-Atram, H. The COVID-19 Pandemic and Patient Safety Culture: A Cross-Sectional Study among Community Pharmacies in Jordan. Healthcare 2022, 10, 1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10081434
Abu Assab M, Jaber D, Basheer H, Abu Assab H, Al-Atram H. The COVID-19 Pandemic and Patient Safety Culture: A Cross-Sectional Study among Community Pharmacies in Jordan. Healthcare. 2022; 10(8):1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10081434
Chicago/Turabian StyleAbu Assab, Mohammad, Deema Jaber, Haneen Basheer, Hanadi Abu Assab, and Haya Al-Atram. 2022. "The COVID-19 Pandemic and Patient Safety Culture: A Cross-Sectional Study among Community Pharmacies in Jordan" Healthcare 10, no. 8: 1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10081434
APA StyleAbu Assab, M., Jaber, D., Basheer, H., Abu Assab, H., & Al-Atram, H. (2022). The COVID-19 Pandemic and Patient Safety Culture: A Cross-Sectional Study among Community Pharmacies in Jordan. Healthcare, 10(8), 1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10081434