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Shaohua, H., Wang, T., Ramalho, N., Zhou, D., Hu, X. & Zhao, H. (2021). Relationship between patient safety culture and safety performance in nursing: The role of safety behaviour. International Journal of Nursing Practice. 27 (4)
H. Shaohua et al., "Relationship between patient safety culture and safety performance in nursing: The role of safety behaviour", in Int. Journal of Nursing Practice, vol. 27, no. 4, 2021
@article{shaohua2021_1731964923578, author = "Shaohua, H. and Wang, T. and Ramalho, N. and Zhou, D. and Hu, X. and Zhao, H.", title = "Relationship between patient safety culture and safety performance in nursing: The role of safety behaviour", journal = "International Journal of Nursing Practice", year = "2021", volume = "27", number = "4", doi = "10.1111/ijn.12937", url = "https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/1440172x" }
TY - JOUR TI - Relationship between patient safety culture and safety performance in nursing: The role of safety behaviour T2 - International Journal of Nursing Practice VL - 27 IS - 4 AU - Shaohua, H. AU - Wang, T. AU - Ramalho, N. AU - Zhou, D. AU - Hu, X. AU - Zhao, H. PY - 2021 SN - 1322-7114 DO - 10.1111/ijn.12937 UR - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/1440172x AB - Aim: The aim of this work is to test the mediator role of patient safety behaviour between safety culture and safety performance among nurses. Methods: This cross-sectional study was carried out between September and December 2017 in the nursing units of 10 primary hospitals, two secondary hospitals and two tertiary hospitals in Anhui Province, China. Results: The study participants comprised 79 RNs from primary hospitals, 147 RNs from secondary hospitals and 242 RNs from tertiary hospitals. Most were female (97.6%) and married (73.1%), and their ages ranged from less than 25 years to retirement age. The sample included nurses working in several departments, including medicine (27.1%), surgery (14.3%), emergency (11.5%) and ICU (9%). Structural equation model analysis results showed that espoused values directly affected safety performance, and practised values affected safety performance through safety behaviour. Conclusion: Our hypothetical model noted that safety behaviour is a positive mediating factor of practised safety values affecting safety performance, suggesting that Chinese nursing managers should construct a patient safety culture that is guided and driven by appropriate values, which will ultimately be externalized as nurses' daily behaviour. ER -