Are nurse presenteeism and patient safety culture associated: a cross-sectional study

  • Hana Brborović Department of Occupational Health and Sports Medicine, University of Applied Health Studies, Zagreb
  • Ognjen Brborović Department of Social Medicine and Organization of Health Care, University of Applied Health Studies, Zagreb
  • Vlatka Brumen Andrija Štampar School of Public Health, Department of Managerial Systems & Occupational Environment, University of Applied Health Studies, Zagreb
  • Gordana Pavleković Department of Social Medicine and Organization of Health Care, University of Applied Health Studies, Zagreb
  • Jadranka Mustajbegović Department of Occupational Health and Sports Medicine, University of Applied Health Studies, Zagreb
Keywords: Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture, occupational health, sickness, Stanford Presenteeism Scale

Abstract

Working as a nurse involves great dedication and sacrifice: working night shifts, working overtime, and coming to work sick. The last is also known as presenteeism. Research has shown that poor nurse performance can affect both caregiver's and patient's safety. The aim of this cross-sectional study was to investigate whether nurse presenteeism affected patient safety culture and to look deeper into the characteristics of nurse presenteeism and patient safety culture in Croatia. The study was conducted in one general hospital in Croatia over April and May 2012 and specifically targeted medical nurses as one of the largest groups of healthcare professionals. They were asked to fill two questionnaires: the six-item Stanford Presenteeism Scale (SPS-6) and the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture (HSOPSC). We found no association between presenteeism and patient safety culture. Overall positive perception of safety was our sample's strength, but other dimensions were positively rated by less than 65 % of participants. The lowest positive response concerned "nonpunitive response to error", which is consistent with previous studies. Presenteeist nurses did not differ in their characteristics from nurses without presenteeism (gender, age, years of experience, working hours, contact with patients and patient safety grades). Our future research will have to include a broader healthcare population for us to be able to identify weak spots and suggest improvements toward high-quality and cost-effective health care.
How to Cite
1.
Brborović H, Brborović O, Brumen V, Pavleković G, Mustajbegović J. Are nurse presenteeism and patient safety culture associated: a cross-sectional study. Arh Hig Rada Toksikol [Internet]. 1 [cited 2024Apr.27];65(2). Available from: https://arhiv.imi.hr/index.php/arhiv/article/view/201
Section
Original article