Survey on Patient Safety Culture in the Republic of Moldova: a baseline study in three healthcare settings

Authors

  • Carmen Tereanu AGENZIA DI TUTELA DELLA SALUTE BERGAMO
  • Giuseppe Sampietro AGENZIA DI TUTELA DELLA SALUTE BERGAMO
  • Francesco Sarnataro AAGENZIA DI TUTELA DELLA SALUTE BERGAMO
  • Dumitru Siscanu MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL 1, CHISINAU
  • Rodica Palaria MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL 1, CHISINAU
  • Victor Savin MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL 1, CHISINAU
  • Tatiana Cliscovscaia AMT RASCANI
  • Valentina Pislaru AMT RASCANI
  • Valeriu Oglinda SANCOS CLINIC, CHISINAU
  • Larisa Capmare SANCOS CLINIC, CHISINAU
  • Mugurel Stefan Ghelase UNIVERSITY OF MEDICINE AND PHARMACY, CRAIOVA
  • Tamara Turcanu Nicolae Testemitanu University of Medicine and Pharmacy of Chisinau

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15386/cjmed-869

Keywords:

organizational culture, patient safety, survey, low-income country, Republic of Moldova

Abstract

Background and aims. The Republic of Moldova is a small ex-soviet country in the Central Eastern European group of states, whose official language is Romanian. In countries with limited resources, quality improvement in healthcare and patient safety are very challenging. This study aims to identify which areas of the patient safety culture (PSC) need prompt intervention.

Methods. A cross-sectional study was conducted in three Moldovan healthcare settings, using the Romanian translation of the US Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture HSOPSC. Descriptive statistics were carried out, based on the responses from n. 929 staff. Percentages of positive responses (PPRs) by item (41 items) and composite (12 PSC areas) were computed.

Results. Most respondents were nurses (53%), followed by doctors (35%). The main work areas were: primary care (27%), medical specialties (20%), gynecology and obstetrics (16%), and general surgery (11%). The highest composite PPRs were for: teamwork within units (80%), feedback & communication about error, organizational learning-continuous improvement and supervisor/manager expectations & actions promoting patient safety (78%), and management support for patient safety (75%). The lowest composites were for: frequency of events reported (57%), non-punitive response to errors (53%), communication openness (51%) and staffing (37%).

Conclusion. Our results suggest that staffing issues should be tackled to provide safe care. Staff avoid to openly report adverse events and/or discuss errors, likely because a poor understanding of the potential of these events for learning and because of fear of blame or punitive actions. Future research should check psychometrics of the Romanian version of the HSOPSC applied to Moldovan staff.

Author Biographies

Carmen Tereanu, AGENZIA DI TUTELA DELLA SALUTE BERGAMO

DEPARTMENT OF HYGIENE AND PREVENTION

Giuseppe Sampietro, AGENZIA DI TUTELA DELLA SALUTE BERGAMO

EPIDEMIOLOGY SERVICE

Francesco Sarnataro, AAGENZIA DI TUTELA DELLA SALUTE BERGAMO

DEPARTMENT OF HYGIENE AND PREVENTION

Dumitru Siscanu, MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL 1, CHISINAU

NEONATOLOGIA

Rodica Palaria, MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL 1, CHISINAU

QUALITY DEPARTMENT

Victor Savin, MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL 1, CHISINAU

MEDICAL DIRECTOR

Tatiana Cliscovscaia, AMT RASCANI

DEPUTY DIRECTOR

Valentina Pislaru, AMT RASCANI

DIRECTOR

Valeriu Oglinda, SANCOS CLINIC, CHISINAU

DIRECTOR

Larisa Capmare, SANCOS CLINIC, CHISINAU

PUBLIC RELATION AND MEDIA COMMUNICATION

Mugurel Stefan Ghelase, UNIVERSITY OF MEDICINE AND PHARMACY, CRAIOVA

PUBLIC HEALTH AND HEALTHCAREMANAGEMENT

Tamara Turcanu, Nicolae Testemitanu University of Medicine and Pharmacy of Chisinau

Department of Pediatrics

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Published

2018-01-30

How to Cite

1.
Tereanu C, Sampietro G, Sarnataro F, Siscanu D, Palaria R, Savin V, Cliscovscaia T, Pislaru V, Oglinda V, Capmare L, Ghelase MS, Turcanu T. Survey on Patient Safety Culture in the Republic of Moldova: a baseline study in three healthcare settings. Medicine and Pharmacy Reports [Internet]. 2018 Jan. 30 [cited 2025 Jun. 20];91(1):65-74. Available from: https://medpharmareports.com/index.php/mpr/article/view/869

Issue

Section

Original Research