Organisational culture: Variation across hospitals and connection to patient safety climate

T. Speroff, S. Nwosu, R. Greevy, M. B. Weinger, T. R. Talbot, R. J. Wall, J. K. Deshpande, D. J. France, E. W. Ely, H. Burgess, J. Englebright, M. V. Williams, R. S. Dittus

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

80 Scopus citations

Abstract

Context Bureaucratic organisational culture is less favourable to quality improvement, whereas organisations with group (teamwork) culture are better aligned for quality improvement. Objective To determine if an organisational group culture shows better alignment with patient safety climate. Design Cross-sectional administration of questionnaires. Setting 40 Hospital Corporation of America hospitals. Participants 1406 nurses, ancillary staff, allied staff and physicians. Main outcome measures Competing Values Measure of Organisational Culture, Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ), Safety Climate Survey (SCSc) and Information and Analysis (IA). Results The Cronbach alpha was 0.81 for the group culture scale and 0.72 for the hierarchical culture scale. Group culture was positively correlated with SAQ and its subscales (from correlation coefficient r=0.44 to 0.55, except situational recognition), ScSc (r=0.47) and IA (r=0.33). Hierarchical culture was negatively correlated with the SAQ scales, SCSc and IA. Among the 40 hospitals, 37.5% had a hierarchical dominant culture, 37.5% a dominant group culture and 25% a balanced culture. Group culture hospitals had significantly higher safety climate scores than hierarchical culture hospitals. The magnitude of these relationships was not affected after adjusting for provider job type and hospital characteristics. Conclusions Hospitals vary in organisational culture, and the type of culture relates to the safety climate within the hospital. In combination with prior studies, these results suggest that a healthcare organisation's culture is a critical factor in the development of its patient safety climate and in the successful implementation of quality improvement initiatives.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)592-596
Number of pages5
JournalQuality and Safety in Health Care
Volume19
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2010

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Organisational culture: Variation across hospitals and connection to patient safety climate'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this