- Ding, Kevin;
- Nguyen, Nicole;
- Carvalho, Melissa;
- Delon, Fanny Nadia Dissak;
- Mekolo, David;
- Nkusu, Daniel;
- Tchekep, Mirene S;
- Oke, Rasheedat A;
- Mbianyor, Mbiarikai A;
- Yenshu, Emmanuel V;
- Boeck, Marissa;
- Collins, Caitlin;
- Jackson, Nicholas;
- Mefire, Alain Chichom;
- Juillard, Catherine
Background
Trauma quality improvement (QI) has resulted in decreased trauma mortality and morbidity in high-income countries and has the potential to do the same in low- and middle-income countries. Effective implementation of QI programs relies on a foundational culture of patient safety; however, studies on trauma-related patient safety culture in Sub-Saharan Africa remain scarce. This study assesses baseline patient safety culture in Cameroon to best identify opportunities for improvement.Materials and methods
Over a 3-week period, the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture was administered in three hospitals in the Littoral region of Cameroon. Percentages of positive responses (PPRs) were calculated across 42 items in 12 survey dimensions. A mixed-effects logistic regression model was used to summarize dimension-level percentages and confidence intervals.Results
A total of 179 trauma-related hospital personnel were surveyed with an overall response rate of 76.8%. High PPRs indicate favorable patient safety culture. Of the 12 dimensions evaluated by the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture, nine had a PPR below 50%. Dimensions particularly pertinent in the context of QI include Nonpunitive Response to Errors with a PPR of 25.8% and Organization Learning-Continuous Improvement with a PPR of 64.7%.Conclusions
The present study elucidates an opportunity for the development of trauma patient safety culture in Cameroon. Low PPR for Nonpunitive Response to Errors indicates a need to shift cultural paradigms from ascribing individual blame to addressing systemic shortcomings of patient care. Moving forward, data from this study will inform interventions to cultivate patient safety culture in partnering Cameroonian hospitals.