A Multilevel Analysis of U.S. Hospital Patient Safety Culture Relationships With Perceptions of Voluntary Event Reporting

scientific article published on 3 November 2016

A Multilevel Analysis of U.S. Hospital Patient Safety Culture Relationships With Perceptions of Voluntary Event Reporting is …
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scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1097/PTS.0000000000000336
P8608Fatcat IDrelease_ilrb57bvzfc47hb6u4qonu7fnu
P932PMC publication ID5415419
P698PubMed publication ID27820722

P2093author name stringCheng Cheng
James M Hoffman
Yinmei Zhou
Jonathan D Burlison
Lisa M Kath
Rebecca R Quillivan
Sam C Courtney
P2860cites workAdverse-event-reporting practices by US hospitals: results of a national surveyQ46931922
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Patient safety incident reporting: a qualitative study of thoughts and perceptions of experts 15 years after 'To Err is Human'.Q38555821
Continuing decline in service delivery for family physicians: is the malpractice crisis playing a role?Q39744430
Preventing medication errors in long-term care: results and evaluation of a large scale web-based error reporting systemQ40184189
Reporting and disclosing medical errors: pediatricians' attitudes and behaviorsQ40244599
Assessing safety culture: guidelines and recommendationsQ43062491
Measuring patient safety culture: an assessment of the clustering of responses at unit level and hospital levelQ43872804
Identifying, understanding and overcoming barriers to medication error reporting in hospitals: a focus group studyQ44050030
Understanding the attitudes of hospital pharmacists to reporting medication incidents: a qualitative study.Q45776061
AHRQ's hospital survey on patient safety culture: psychometric analysesQ46359548
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P577publication date2016-11-03
P1433published inJournal of patient safetyQ27722373
P1476titleA Multilevel Analysis of U.S. Hospital Patient Safety Culture Relationships With Perceptions of Voluntary Event Reporting