Associations between safety culture and employee engagement over time: a retrospective analysis

ELD Biddison, L Paine, P Murakami… - BMJ quality & …, 2016 - qualitysafety.bmj.com
ELD Biddison, L Paine, P Murakami, C Herzke, SJ Weaver
BMJ quality & safety, 2016qualitysafety.bmj.com
With the growth of the patient safety movement and development of methods to measure
workforce health and success have come multiple modes of assessing healthcare worker
opinions and attitudes about work and the workplace. Safety culture, a group-level measure
of patient safety-related norms and behaviours, has been proposed to influence a variety of
patient safety outcomes. Employee engagement, conceptualised as a positive, work-related
mindset including feelings of vigour, dedication and absorption in one's work, has also …
With the growth of the patient safety movement and development of methods to measure workforce health and success have come multiple modes of assessing healthcare worker opinions and attitudes about work and the workplace. Safety culture, a group-level measure of patient safety-related norms and behaviours, has been proposed to influence a variety of patient safety outcomes. Employee engagement, conceptualised as a positive, work-related mindset including feelings of vigour, dedication and absorption in one's work, has also demonstrated an association with a number of important worker outcomes in healthcare. To date, the relationship between responses to these two commonly used measures has been poorly characterised. Our study used secondary data analysis to assess the relationship between safety culture and employee engagement over time in a sample of >50 inpatient hospital units in a large US academic health system. With >2000 respondents in each of three time periods assessed, we found moderate to strong positive correlations (r=0.43–0.69) between employee engagement and four Safety Attitudes Questionnaire domains. Independent collection of these two assessments may have limited our analysis in that minimally different inclusion criteria resulted in some differences in the total respondents to the two instruments. Our findings, nevertheless, suggest a key area in which healthcare quality improvement efforts might be streamlined.
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