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The association of professionalism and systems thinking on patient safety competency: A structural equation model

Authors
Kakemam, EdrisGhafari, MasoudRouzbahani, MahtabZahedi, HamidehRoh, Young Sook
Issue Date
Apr-2022
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
competency; nurses; patient safety; professionalism; systems thinking
Citation
JOURNAL OF NURSING MANAGEMENT, v.30, no.3, pp 817 - 826
Pages
10
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF NURSING MANAGEMENT
Volume
30
Number
3
Start Page
817
End Page
826
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/55128
DOI
10.1111/jonm.13536
ISSN
0966-0429
1365-2834
Abstract
Aims The aim of this study is to identify how professionalism and systems thinking contribute to patient safety competency among Iranian nurses. Background Professionalism, systems thinking and patient safety competency play important roles in the quality of care. Strategies to enhance the patient safety competency of nurses must be devised by identifying the relationships between these variables. Methods A cross-sectional, descriptive survey study was conducted in 10 teaching hospitals in Tabriz, Iran. A total of 358 nursing staff with at least 12 months of experience in nursing were enrolled. Data were collected using the Professionalism scale, Systems Thinking Scale and Patient Safety Competency Self-Evaluation tool. Structural equation modelling analysis was performed to test the relationship between variables. Results The final model illustrated a good fit (chi(2)/df = 2.329, goodness-of-fit index = 0.990, Tucker-Lewis index = 0.906 and root mean square error of approximation = 0.068). Professionalism directly influenced patient safety competency (beta = 0.59, p < 0.001) and indirectly influenced systems thinking (beta = 0.29, p < 0.001). Systems thinking directly influenced patient safety competency (beta = 0.46, p < 0.001). Results indicated that 91% of the variance in patient safety competency was explained by professionalism while 40.1% of the variance in the systems thinking was explained by professionalism. Conclusions The professionalism and systems thinking of hospital nurses play a pivotal role as predictors in patient safety competency. Training opportunities, mentorship and nursing managers' leadership are needed to assist hospital nurses in their perceptions of professionalism and systems thinking. Implications for Nursing Management Nursing educators and managers should implement patient safety training strategies and improve the professionalism and systems thinking of hospital nurses to promote patient safety and quality care.
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적십자간호대학 (간호학과)
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