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BMJ Open logoLink to BMJ Open
. 2015 Jul 24;5(7):e007881. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-007881

A questionnaire survey exploring healthcare professionals’ attitudes towards teamwork and safety in acute care areas in South Korea

Sung Eun Kim 1, Chan Woong Kim 1, Sang Jin Lee 1, Je Hyeok Oh 1, Dong Hoon Lee 1, Tae Ho Lim 2, Hyuk Joong Choi 2, Hyun Soo Chung 3, Ji Yeong Ryu 4, Hye Young Jang 5, Yoon Hee Choi 6, Su Jin Kim 7, Jin Hee Jung 8
PMCID: PMC4521544  PMID: 26209120

Abstract

Objectives

Although human factors are important in terms of patient safety, there have been very few reports on the attitudes of healthcare professionals working in acute care settings in South Korea. In the present study, we investigated the attitudes of such professionals, their cultures and their management systems.

Design

A questionnaire survey with 65 items covering nine themes affecting patient safety. Nine themes were compared via a three-or-more-way analysis of variance, with interaction, followed by multiple comparisons among several groups.

Setting

Intensive care units, emergency departments and surgical units of nine urban hospitals.

Participants

592 nurses and 160 physicians.

Intervention

None.

Outcome measures

Mean scores using a five-point scale and combined response scores for each of the nine themes.

Results

The mean score for information-sharing was the highest (3.78±0.49) and that for confidence/assertion was the lowest (2.97±0.34). The mean scores for teamwork, error management, work value, organisational climate, leadership, stress and fatigue level, and error/procedural compliance were intermediate. Physicians showed lower scores in leadership and higher scores in information-sharing than nurses. Respondents with 24 months or less of a clinical career showed higher scores in leadership, stress and fatigue, and error scores and lower scores in work value than more experienced respondents.

Conclusions

Our results suggest that medical personnel in Korea are relatively reluctant to disclose error or assert their different opinions with others. Many did not adequately recognise the negative effects of fatigue and stress, attributed errors to personal incompetence, and error-management systems were inadequate. Discrepancies in leadership and information-sharing were evident between professional groups, and leadership, stress, fatigue level, work value and error scores varied with the length of work experience. These can be used as baseline data to establish training programmes for patient safety in Korea.

Keywords: INTENSIVE & CRITICAL CARE, EDUCATION & TRAINING (see Medical Education & Training)


Strengths and limitations of this study.

  • This study is a questionnaire survey to investigate the attitudes of medical team members in critical areas of hospital, hospital and national culture and management systems towards human factors and patient safety.

  • The survey comprised nine themes: leadership, confidence–assertion, information-sharing, teamwork, awareness of stress and fatigue, work values, organisational climate, error/procedural compliance and error management.

  • This study suggests that there is a rigid culture which does not encourage open discussion and feedback on different opinions with other colleagues, high value on the technical skill and competence and high dependency on the decisions of the senior staff members relatively. In addition, hospital and national culture and management systems towards human factors and patient safety were still insufficient.

  • The data are from teaching hospitals, which limits the generalisability of the results, and further surveys need to extend to different types of medical institutions.

Introduction

In addition to medical knowledge and technical skills, the importance of human factors is being increasingly emphasised for safe and high-quality medical care and for decreasing medical error incidents.1–4 Such human factors include non-technical skills such as respectful leadership, information-sharing, communication, teamwork and good decision-making. Inadequate management of stress and workload causes medical errors.5 6

In critical situations, team members at all levels must work together to competently perform critical tasks.7 8 In particular, team performance and coordination play vital roles in terms of patient safety. Increasing emphasis is placed on the effective application of human factors to patient care. Many countries have developed relevant training courses.

Attitudes towards human factors relevant to patient safety are formed not only personally, but are also influenced by group characteristics such as occupation, organisation and culture.9–13 Such attitudes are also strongly affected by individual hospital and national medical systems.14 Therefore, it is important that there is a common consensus across hospital departments and units across the country and that this is reflected in the healthcare management system. Medical professionals must be trained to recognise the importance of human factors and to develop appropriate management methods.

Many tools that measure attitudes have been developed and applied; these include the Operating Room Management Attitudes Questionnaire (ORMAQ). Data collected using such tools are used to identify the prevailing attitudes towards safety and the organisational culture; to establish goals and strategies for training; to evaluate and upgrade training programmes; and to draw comparisons with data from other countries.12 13 15 Such information can also be used as a component of a quality-assurance programme.1 12

In Korea, there is an increasing number of training programmes on patient safety for physicians and nurses within hospitals and the national medical system; these reflect not only the need for healthcare accreditation but also the societal demand that patient care be safe. Individualised training courses for small units, such as private hospitals and associations, are available. However, there are a limited number of universal and integral training courses. Therefore, a comprehensive evaluation of the current situation is required to allow us to define strategies for education in human factors. However, although there are few reports on a small number of job-specific human factors,16 17 there are very few reports on the attitudes of medical team members working in critical care settings in Korea.

Therefore, in this study, we explored the attitudes of medical team members working in critical care settings within hospitals and management systems of South Korea towards human factors relevant to patient safety. Our data serve as a baseline for the development of training programmes and improvement of management systems that may enhance safety.

Method

This study was approved by the institutional review board (IRB). All participants provided written informed consent prior to participation. The survey was conducted between October 2011 and March 2012.

Participants

The participants were nurses and physicians working in nine urban teaching hospitals in South Korea. The nurses worked in intensive care units, emergency departments and operating suites; the doctors worked as residents, specialists and interns in clinical departments caring for patients treated in these settings. The number of nurses who work in this setting is 750 and that of doctors is 560 approximately in nine hospitals.

Questionnaire and procedure

The questionnaire was anonymous; the demographic data collected included age, sex, length of clinical career, occupation and work area for nurses, and specialty for physicians.

We used the ORMAQ (with minor changes in wording) to survey attitudes towards teamwork and safety; the changes sought to accurately describe the work environment. For example, ‘operating theatre’ was changed to ‘medical team.’ The questionnaire had nine themes: leadership, confidence/assertion, information-sharing, teamwork, stress and fatigue, work values, organisational climate, error and procedural compliance and error management. There were 65 items; all were answered using a scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree). Copies of the questionnaire were given to each department, and completed questionnaires were returned to our laboratory in prestamped self-addressed envelopes.

Data analysis

We calculated distribution ratios for sex, occupation, working area (nurses) and specialty (physicians); we divided the lengths of clinical careers into units of 24 months. The medians and quantiles of age and length of clinical career were calculated.

A mean score for each item was calculated on the basis of responses on the five-point scale. We recognised three types of response. ‘Strongly agree’ and ‘slightly agree’ were considered to be ‘agree’; ‘average’ was considered to be ‘neutral’; and ‘slightly disagree’ and ‘strongly disagree’ were considered to be ‘disagree’.

To compare each theme among groups, the response scores of items within each of the nine themes were combined to allow means and SDs to be calculated. Items were reverse-scored when necessary; thus, the higher the score, the more positive the attitude. Internal reliability was measured by calculating Cronbach's α (again, with reverse scoring when necessary).

The mean values for each theme were compared via a three-or-more-way analysis of variance, with interaction, followed by multiple comparisons among several groups varying in any of age, sex, clinical career length or occupation.

A result was considered significant at the 5% critical level (p<0.05). All statistical analyses were performed using IBM SPSS Statistics software V.20 (IBM Inc., Armonk, New York, USA).

Results

The overall response rate was 69.6% (752/1080). The response rate for nurses was 82.2% (592/720) and that of doctors 44.4% (160/360). Of the nurses, 492 (83.1%) were registered nurses, 78 (13.2%) were charge nurses and 22 (3.7%) were head nurses. Nurse evaluations are shown in table 1.

Table 1.

General characteristics of respondents

Median and quartiles or n (%)
Male 141 (18.8%)
Age (years) 28 (26–33)
Clinical career (months) 41 (15–87)
Clinical career ≤24 months 289 (38.4%)
Nurses
 Intensive care unit 262 (44.3%)
 Emergency department 160 (27.0%)
 Operating room 140 (23.7%)
Physicians
 Specialist 28 (17.5%)
 Resident 98 (61.3%)
 Intern 34 (21.3%)

The status of the 160 physicians is shown in table 1. Of the 160 physicians, 45 (28.1%) worked in emergency medicine, 35 (21.9%) in internal medicine, 42 (26.3%) in anaesthesia and 4 (2.5%) in other specialties.

Attitudes to human factors and safety

The means and SDs of responses to the 65 items, and of the three-stage classifications, are shown in table 2. The five-point scale scores for the nine themes are shown in table 3. The information-sharing score was the highest and the confidence/assertion score was the lowest.

Table 2.

Attitudes of respondents to human factors and patient safety

Items Mean±SD* Disagree (%) Neutral (%) Agree (%)
Leadership structure
 Senior staff should encourage questions from junior medical and nursing staff if appropriate 3.85±0.81 5.2 24.7 70.1
 Doctors who encourage suggestions from team members are weak leaders 2.29±0.84 68.5 21.0 10.5
 Successful medical team management is primarily a function of the doctor's medical and technical proficiency 3.38±0.82 13.8 38.8 47.3
 Leadership of the medical team should rest with the medical staff 3.18±0.91 24.2 37.3 38.5
 There are no circumstances where a junior team member should assume control 2.43±0.91 58.8 29.0 12.2
Confidence–assertion
 The senior person, if available, should take over and make all decisions in life-threatening emergencies 3.67±0.88 11.4 20.2 68.4
 Junior team members should not question the decisions made by senior personnel 2.33±0.88 63.6 26.1 10.3
 If I perceive a problem with the management of a patient, I will speak up, regardless of who might be affected 3.31±0.76 14.1 42.7 43.2
 In critical situations, I rely on my superiors to tell me what to do 3.93±0.57 1.3 16.2 82.4
 I sometimes feel uncomfortable telling team members from other disciplines that they need to take some action 3.18±0.79 19.7 44.1 36.2
 Team members should not question the decisions or actions of senior staff except when they threaten the safety of the patient management 3.01±0.80 27.1 45.1 27.8
 I always ask questions when I feel there is something I do not understand 3.63±0.71 5.1 35.4 59.6
Information-sharing
 A regular debriefing of procedures and decisions after a session or shift is an important part of developing and maintaining effective team coordination 3.99±0.70 2.5 17.0 80.5
 Team members in charge should verbalise plans for procedures or actions and should be sure that the information is understood and acknowledged by others 3.90±0.68 2.7 20.6 76.7
 I am encouraged by my leaders and co-workers to report any incidents I may observe 3.54±0.73 7.7 35.8 56.5
 The presession team briefing is important for safety and for effective team management 3.68±0.70 4.1 32.2 63.7
Teamwork
 The only people qualified to give me feedback are members of my own profession 2.90±0.97 39.1 31.0 29.8
 It is better to agree with other medical team members than to voice a different opinion 2.72±0.77 38.6 46.1 15.3
 The doctor's responsibilities include coordination between his or her work team and other support teams 4.05±0.68 1.5 15.8 82.7
 Medical team members share responsibilities for prioritising activities in high workload situations 3.94±0.67 1.6 20.6 77.8
 I enjoy working as part of a team 3.49±0.71 6.1 42.8 51.1
 To resolve conflicts, team members should openly discuss their differences with each other 3.82±0.69 2.4 27.1 70.5
 All members of the medical team are qualified to give me feedback 3.48±0.68 6.1 43.9 50.0
 The concept of all medical personnel working as a team does not work at this hospital 2.50±0.79 54.1 36.4 9.6
 Effective medical team coordination requires members to take into account the personalities of other team members 3.80±0.61 1.2 27.0 71.8
Stress and fatigue
 Even when tired, I perform effectively during critical phases of patient care 3.56±0.81 9.7 32.1 58.2
 We should be aware of, and sensitive to, the personal problems of other team members 3.72±0.74 6.3 25.9 67.8
 I let other team members know when my workload is becoming (or is about to become) excessive 3.35±0.85 18.6 31.5 49.9
 My decision-making is as good in emergencies as it is in routine situations 3.37±0.70 9.0 46.9 44.0
 I am more likely to make errors in tense or hostile situations 3.17±0.89 24.9 36.0 39.1
 I am less effective when stressed or tired 3.81±0.74 3.9 26.9 69.3
 My performance is not adversely affected by working with an inexperienced or less capable team member 2.50±0.79 54.4 35.5 10.1
 Team members should monitor each other for signs of stress or tiredness 3.83±0.65 1.7 26.1 72.2
 I become irritated when I have to work with inexperienced medical staff 3.51±0.79 8.4 41.3 50.3
 A truly professional team member can leave personal problems behind when working in patient care 3.99±0.65 1.6 16.6 81.8
 Team members should feel obligated to mention their own psychological stress or physical problems to other medical team personnel before or during a shift or assignment 3.13±0.79 18.8 49.1 32.1
 Personal problems can adversely affect my performance 3.35±0.76 12.1 43.4 44.5
Work values
 Senior staff deserve extra benefits and privileges 3.39±0.75 10.8 41.8 47.5
 I do my best work when people leave me alone 3.40±0.78 12.0 42.0 46.0
 It bothers me when others do not respect my professional capabilities 3.53±0.78 9.7 35.4 54.9
 I try to be a person whom others will enjoy working with 4.01±0.61 0.4 16.2 83.4
 It is important that my competence be acknowledged by others 3.74±0.66 3.5 27.8 68.8
 I value compliments about my work 3.51±0.73 6.4 42.8 50.8
 As long as the work gets done, I do not care what others think of me 2.65±0.84 48.0 35.1 16.9
 A good reputation in the medical field is important to me 3.66±0.69 3.6 35.6 60.8
 I value the goodwill of my fellow workers—I care that others see me as friendly and cooperative 3.73±0.63 1.9 30.9 67.3
 It is an insult to be forced to wait unnecessarily for other members of the medical team 3.60±0.83 8.8 35.4 55.8
 In the medical field, I get the respect that a person of my profession deserves 3.13±0.70 14.6 57.2 28.2
Organisational climate
 The department provides adequate, timely information about events in the hospital which might affect my work 3.58±0.73 6.9 33.8 59.3
 Working in this hospital is like being part of a large family 3.06±0.83 23.1 47.3 29.5
 Departmental leadership listens to staff and cares about our concerns 3.38±0.84 12.8 39.1 48.1
 I am proud to work for this hospital 3.10±0.78 17.3 55.3 27.4
 I like my job 3.45±0.75 7.0 45.2 47.7
 I am provided with adequate training to successfully accomplish my job 3.42±0.73 9.5 42.2 48.3
Error/procedural compliance
 Errors are a sign of incompetence 3.05±0.87 29.0 37.5 33.4
 I am ashamed when I make a mistake in front of other team members 3.29±0.80 15.8 41.6 42.6
 Procedures and policies are strictly followed in our department 3.45±0.65 5.1 46.9 48.0
 Mistakes are handled appropriately in this hospital 3.32±0.74 10.2 48.8 41.0
 Human error is inevitable 3.57±0.70 5.6 37.9 56.5
 Team members frequently disregard rules or guidelines (eg, hand washing, treatment protocols/clinical pathways, sterile field) developed for our department 2.39±0.83 62.1 27.8 10.1
Error management
 I rarely witness an error where one or more team members lack the knowledge to perform the needed action 2.85±0.75 31.9 49.9 18.2
 Errors committed during patient management are not important, as long as the patient improves 2.18±0.69 74.3 21.9 3.7
 I make errors in the field 3.12±0.70 17.6 54.0 28.5
 Medical errors are discussed to prevent recurrence 3.89±0.64 1.2 22.7 76.1
 A confidential reporting system that documents medical errors is important for safety 3.72±0.78 4.9 31.4 63.7

*Means are calculated from direct scores of respondents.

Table 3.

Mean scores and reliability according to the nine themes

Theme Mean±SD* Maximum Minimum α
Leadership structure 3.31±0.43 2.00 4.80 0.258
Confidence–assertion 2.97±0.34 1.71 4.43 0.325
Information-sharing 3.78±0.49 2.25 5.00 0.658
Teamwork 3.61±0.37 2.56 4.89 0.634
Stress and fatigue 3.29±0.27 2.42 4.25 0.347
Work value 3.41±0.32 2.45 4.45 0.570
Organisational climate 3.33±0.52 1.50 5.00 0.750
Error/procedural compliance 3.27±0.35 2.17 4.67 0.212
Error management 3.48±0.34 2.40 4.60 0.156

*Means are calculated from the reversed scores when necessary so that the higher the score, the more positive the attitude.

α, Cronbach's α.

Discrepancy of attitudes to human factors and safety

In the questionnaire section concerning leadership, the mean score was 3.37±0.43 for nurses and 3.12±0.39 for physicians; the latter score was significantly lower. In addition, the mean score was 3.35±0.43 for respondents with 24 months or less of a clinical career and 3.29±0.43 for those with more than 24 months; the latter score was significantly lower (table 4).

Table 4.

Discrepancies of attitudes to human factors and patient safety

95% CI
Theme Group B±SE Lower Upper p Value
Leadership structure Occupation Physician* −0.293±0.052 −0.395 −0.190 <0.001
Clinical career ≤24 months† 0.132±0.033 0.067 0.197 <0.001
Information-sharing Occupation Physician 0.134±0.062 0.013 0.256 0.030
Stress and fatigue Clinical career ≤24 months 0.065±0.021 0.023 0.107 0.002
Work values Clinical career ≤24 months −0.064±0.025 −0.113 −0.014 0.012
Error/procedural compliance Clinical career ≤24 months 0.092±0.027 0.038 0.145 0.001
Error management Clinical career ≤24 months 0.055±0.027 0.001 0.108 0.045

*Reference group: Nurse.

†Reference group: Clinical career >24 months.

B, parameter estimate.

For the questionnaire section concerning information-sharing, the mean score was 3.76±0.48 for nurses and 3.85±0.54 for physicians; the former score was significantly lower. In the questionnaire section concerning stress and fatigue, the mean score was 3.33±0.27 for respondents with 24 months or less of a clinical career and 3.26±0.27 for those with more than 24 months; the latter score was significantly lower (table 4).

For the questionnaire section concerning work value, the mean score was 3.37±0.33 for respondents with 24 months or less of a clinical career and 3.43±0.30 for those with more than 24 months; the former score was significantly lower (table 4).

In the section on error/procedural compliance, the mean score was 3.32±0.33 for respondents with 24 months or less of a clinical career and 3.24±0.35 for those with more than 24 months. In the section on error management, the mean score was 3.51±0.33 for respondents with 24 months or less of a clinical career and 3.46±0.35 for those with more than 24 months; the latter score was significantly lower (table 4).

There were no between-group differences in scores for confidence/assertion, teamwork or organisational climate. No gender-based differences were apparent.

Discussion

This is the first attempt to survey the attitudes of healthcare providers working in acute care areas in South Korea in terms of human factors influencing patient safety. We identified the predominant attitudes of healthcare professionals working in such settings, the safety climate of hospitals in Korea, and differences between Korea and other countries. These are discussed below with reference to six areas: leadership and confidence/assertion, information-sharing and teamwork, awareness of stress and fatigue, work values and organisational climate, error/procedural compliance and error management, and discrepancies in attitudes.

Leadership and confidence–assertion

An organisation that shares responsibilities increases patient safety because high-level performance is assured when work is considered to be worthwhile.18 19 Leadership is important not only to senior staff but also to junior staff. The attitudes of healthcare professionals at all levels are vital. It is true that doctors play leading roles in patient care, especially in critical situations, but they depend heavily on their team members.20

In this study, 70.1% agreed with the statement that “Senior staff should encourage questions from junior staff” and 68.5% disagreed with “Doctors who encourage suggestions from team members are weak leaders”. Thus, an egalitarian attitude and an opinion-gathering style were more positively viewed than a vertical and authoritarian approach. However, the scores were lower than those of a study on anaesthetists’ attitudes conducted by Flin et al12 based in the UK; the scores in that study were 96.0% and 95.0%, respectively. Furthermore, in this study, only 13.8% disagreed with the statement “Successful medical team management is primarily a function of the doctor's medical and technical proficiency”; this is lower than the 67.0% in the study of Flin et al.12 Therefore, medical and nursing personnel in Korea often perceive the technical skills and competency of a leader as more important than non-technical skills.

The confidence/assertion items address superior-subordinate relationships and the openness of leaders to questions and suggestions.1 12 The score reflects the importance assigned to inclusion of junior staff members in decisions and conversations,1 12 and also reflects the personal and organisational culture of the hierarchy.1 13

In this study, only 1.3% disagreed with the statement “In critical situations, I rely on my superiors to tell me what to do” and 27.1% disagreed with “Team members should not question the decisions or actions of senior staff except when they threaten the safety of patient management”. These scores were lower than those recorded by Flin et al,12 which were 74.0% and 66.0%, respectively. This indicates that many healthcare professionals in Korea are highly dependent on decisions made by their seniors and that team structures and hierarchies within such structures are not even.

In addition, 63.6% disagreed with the statement “Junior team members should not question the decisions made by senior personnel” and 43.2% agreed with “If I perceive a problem with the management of a patient, I will speak up, regardless of who might be affected”; these scores are lower than those recorded by Flin et al,12 which were 89.0% and 83.0%, respectively. Thus, a rigid culture often exists in which workers feel uncomfortable about disclosing errors made by seniors or other staff members, and will not voice any difference of opinion with such persons.

Information sharing and teamwork

Information-sharing is important to maintain team activities via information exchange and regular briefings and debriefings. It also plays an important role in the maintenance of effective team coordination.1 12 In general, our respondents exhibited positive attitudes toward information-sharing; medical personnel attach considerable importance to briefings, debriefings and consultations with other team members.

The teamwork items explored attitudes toward open discussion of the varying opinions of group members, and respect for the personalities and problems of others.1 12 18 Medical errors are more common when teamwork is poor rather than good.21–23 Good teamwork avoids problems, affords higher performance, and shortens operative times.24

Overall, the attitude towards teamwork was good, but only 39.1% of respondents disagreed with the statement “The only people qualified to give me feedback are members of my own profession”; 38.6% disagreed with “It is better to agree with other medical team members than to voice a different opinion.” These values were lower than those reported by Flin et al,12 which were 68.0% and 88.0%, respectively. We thus found that Korean medical personnel tend to be less assertive in open discussions, with or without feedback from other team members. We assume that these results reflect the Korean culture; it is generally unacceptable to express opinions or to have discussions about colleagues.

In addition, only 51.1% of respondents reported that they enjoyed working as part of a team in their current working environment, and 54.1% disagreed with “The concept of all medical personnel working as a team does not work at this hospital”. It may be true that many Korean medical personnel feel that teamwork is currently ineffective and unsatisfactory. As mentioned above, this reflects the reluctance to voice an opinion contrary to that of a senior or other team member. This encourages ineffective and unsatisfactory teamwork.

Stress and fatigue

The questions on stress and fatigue explored the awareness of the negative effects of fatigue, stress and personal problems on performance, as well as of the significance of personal fallibility. 1 12 13 In this study, only 9.7% of respondents disagreed with the idea that fatigue negatively affected performance during critical phases of patient care and only 9.0% disagreed with the notion that fatigue negatively affected good decision-making both in emergencies and routine situations. A total of 39.1% of respondents agreed that errors were more probable in intense or hostile situations and 44.5% (thus, less than half) agreed that personal problems adversely affected performance.

Other studies on attitudes towards stress and fatigue showed that respondents tended to deny personal vulnerability to stressors, and played down the significance of stress and fatigue. Sexton et al13 compared medical staff to pilots; the latter were more aware of the effects of stress. In addition, Flin et al12 found that only 30–40% of respondents reported that they had been affected by stress and fatigue; answers to other items suggested denial of personal vulnerability to stressors in general. In this study, our respondents exhibited very low levels of awareness of the negative effects of fatigue, stress and personal problems on performance, in contrast to other studies. We assume that these results are attributable, at least in part, to the fact that many medical personnel have been trained to minimise the effects of personal stress and fatigue on achievement, both throughout their school years, and to ensure effective patient care after they become medical professionals. This reflects a cultural attitude: A person who is vulnerable to stress is considered to lack professionalism.

Many studies have shown that error is more likely and suboptimal patient care is more frequent when medical personnel are stressed, burnt out and/or dissatisfied.3 4 25 26 Therefore, the negative effects of fatigue, stress and personal problems must be appropriately recognised, and changes in organisational climates are necessary to reduce the incidence of errors.

Work values and organisational climate

Items on attitudes towards work explored awareness of and the perceived importance of professional recognition.12 Thus, questions about the organisational climate sought to evaluate the shared attitudes, beliefs and values held across an organisation and affinity for the job.1 12 A total of 50.8% of our respondents agreed with the statement “I value compliments about my work” and 60.8% agreed with “A good reputation in the medical field is important to me”; these values were lower than those reported by Flin et al12 (91.0% and 82.0%, respectively). This indicates that, in Korea, approximately half of all medical personnel do not attach importance to professional recognition. In addition, only 28.2% agreed with the statement “I get the respect that a person of my profession deserves”; this figure is much lower than the 66.0% reported in the study by Flin et al. 12 This indicates that the level of job satisfaction is very low.

In terms of the organisational climate, only 29.5% agreed with the statement “Working in this hospital is like being part of a large family” and only 27.4% agreed with “I am proud to work for this hospital”; these figures were even lower than the low results obtained by Flin et al12 (41.0% and 58.0%, respectively). In addition, 47.4% agreed with ‘I like my job’; this is much lower than the 90% reported by Flin et al.12 Fewer than 50% of respondents in this study replied positively to most other items in this section. Thus, only a few respondents take pride in their organisations, profess affinity for their jobs and hold positive familial viewpoints towards their organisations.

Work values and organisational climate reflect the level of satisfaction with the job and the working environment. Enhancing job satisfaction improves patient safety; teamwork and communication are encouraged.12 27 In addition, low satisfaction with the job or working environment causes poor communication and higher levels of work stress, eventually triggering higher accident rates, burnout and adverse patient quality-of-care issues, as mentioned above.27 28

The low level of job and work environment satisfaction evident in this study will negatively affect the general attitude towards human factors because poor satisfaction is itself a deleterious stressor. Therefore, integrated organisational efforts are essential to improve job satisfaction, improving patient safety.

Error/procedural compliance and error management

This section explored attitudes towards the recognition that human errors are inevitable and that errors do not imply lack of knowledge or incompetence.29 Hospital error management systems seek to prevent recurrence via error reports and cause analyses.12 Many of our respondent medical personnel considered that errors reflected a lack of knowledge and were a sign of incompetence. In addition, only 28.5% agreed with the statement ‘I make errors’ and only 56.5% agreed with ‘Human error is inevitable’.

Error-reporting systems generally rely on self-reporting, and avoidance of disclosure caused by feelings of guilt, blame and shame is a major obstacle to the effectiveness of such systems.30 31 Therefore, improvements to the culture of error disclosure, and new confidential error reporting systems, are required to ensure better and more effective error reporting.32–34

Of all respondents, 48% considered that policies and procedures were strictly followed by the safety management systems of their hospital, but only 41% agreed with ‘Mistakes are handled appropriately in this hospital’. This indicates a lack of appropriate error management. In the study by Flin et al,12 only 39% of respondents reported that mistakes were handled appropriately; development and improvement of hospital safety management systems was considered necessary.

Discrepancy of attitudes to teamwork and safety

Helmreich and Davies1 reported that nurses and anaesthetists worked within less hierarchical structures than did surgeons, and found differences in attitudes towards leadership by medical position and specialty. In this study, physicians and other respondents with more than 24 months of clinical experience exhibited autocratic leadership styles. This is explained by the prevailing culture, which features a rigid hierarchy of physicians, with more experienced personnel at the top.

Nurses scored information-sharing lower than physicians; such sharing is important in the teamwork context. This finding is similar to those of other teamwork studies, which found differences in the perceived extents of teamwork and openness of communication among nurses and physicians in the same medical teams.13 35–37

More experienced healthcare professionals had relatively less tolerant attitudes towards stress and fatigue, incompetent error/procedural compliance and poor error management. The reason may be that, as careers progress and positions become more senior, medical personnel assimilate the general culture: Any negative effect of stress and fatigue on work and performance reflects incompetence and the individual is to blame. In addition, we presume that senior personnel know that proper error management systems encouraging errors to be openly disclosed and discussed are lacking. Several studies have reported differences in attitudes towards stress and fatigue among medical personnel, by position or specialty. Sexton et al13 found that more surgical consultants, compared to doctors in other positions or specialties, denied any effects of stress and fatigue. In addition, Helmreich and Davies1 showed that anaesthetists considered stress and fatigue to be more problematic than did other medical subgroups.

The perceived importance of professional recognition was relatively low among less experienced medical personnel. This is attributable to the rigid hierarchy, in which the decisions of senior personnel are implemented without question.

Limitations and future research suggestion

There are several limitations to our study. First, the data were gathered in only nine Korean teaching hospitals, and thus may not be generalisable to other settings. Additional surveys are needed to assess the attitudes of medical personnel working in other teaching hospitals and other types of medical institutions. Second, the numbers of respondents in the two groups (physicians and nurses) differed. Third, comparisons between groups are of limited utility because of the low reliabilities of the chosen themes. Reliabilities have varied among other studies that employed ORMAQ. In this study, we used ORMAQ to compare the attitudes of Korean healthcare professionals with those of other countries. Universal measurement tools which can be used in all healthcare settings across the world are needed. Such tools could be used to establish strategies, evaluate training and make comparisons between different groups or countries. Fourth, safety management systems and the overall work climate may differ between hospitals; however, we investigated these factors in combination because we wished to obtain an overview of attitudes in Korea. Finally, other factors, such as educational experience and position, may influence the attitudes of medical personnel towards human factors influencing patient safety.

Conclusions

We explored institutional cultures, as well as the predominant attitudes towards and opinions about human factors affecting patient safety, among medical personnel working in critical care settings in nine Korean teaching hospitals We found a tendency to consider the technical skill and competence of leaders as more important than human factors in medical care; a rigid culture prohibiting open discussion, feedback and airing of different opinions with colleagues; a high dependency on decisions of senior staff members; low recognition of the negative effects of fatigue, stress and personal problems; poor satisfaction in terms of teamwork; low pride in the organisation; poor job satisfaction; and limited perception that professional recognition was important. In addition, many respondents considered that errors were attributable to a lack of knowledge, being a sign of incompetence, and were often reluctant to disclose such errors. In addition, hospital error management systems are inadequate. Differences in attitudes towards leadership and information-sharing were evident between the professional groups, and the duration of clinical experience influenced attitudes towards leadership, stress and fatigue, the value of work and error.

Our findings serve as baseline data that can be used to develop staff training programmes and systems increasing patient safety.

Team-oriented medical simulations (crisis resource management using a simulator) effectively convince team members of the importance of human factors.38–40 This type of training is urgently needed to break down the rigid culture described above and should be included to the core curriculum. Senior personnel should be trained first; a cultural change is needed within the hierarchy, who will then advocate for changes in organisational cultures. Personnel with long-clinical careers must be the first group to be trained; their negative attitudes towards leadership, stress and fatigue, the value of work and error management must first be altered.

Footnotes

Contributors: SEK, CWK, SJL, DHL and THL were involved in the conception and design. SJL, HJC, HSC, JYR, HYJ, YHC, SJK and JHJ were involved in the acquisition, analysis and interpretation of data. SEK, CWK, DHL and JHO contributed to the drafting and writing of the article. All authors participated in the review and approval of the final version of the manuscript.

Funding: This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Competing interests: None declared.

Ethics approval: Institutional review board of the Chung–Ang University Hospital.

Provenance and peer review: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

Data sharing statement: No additional data are available.

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