Effects of Implementing an ICU Discharge Readiness Checklist on Patient Safety Culture: A Quasi-Experimental Research Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Population
2.3. Materials
2.4. Outcome Measures
- (1)
- Compare PSC measured by the adapted Croatian version of the HOSPSC between the intervention and control groups prior to the introduction of the ICU-DRC.
- (2)
- Assess the fidelity in the use of the ICU-DRC for the intervention group.
- (3)
- Assess the difference in changes in PSC measured in both the intervention group and control group after the intervention was conducted for a period of one year.
2.5. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Response Rates and Sample Characteristics
3.2. Patient Safety Culture Prior to the Intervention
3.2.1. Patient Safety Culture in the Surgical ICU–Intervention Group Prior to the Intervention
3.2.2. Patient Safety Culture in the Medical ICU–Control Group Prior to the Intervention
3.2.3. Differences in Patient Safety Culture Between the Surgical ICU–Intervention Group and the Medical ICU–Control Group in the First Measurement (Inter-Department Differences)
3.3. ICU-DCR Fidelity of Use
3.4. Patient Safety Culture Following the Intervention
3.4.1. Patient Safety Culture in the Surgical ICU–Intervention Group Following the Intervention
3.4.2. Patient Safety Culture in the Medical ICU–Control Group Following the Intervention
3.4.3. Changes in Patient Safety Culture Following the Intervention
Changes in Patient Safety Culture in the Surgical ICU–Intervention Group Following the Intervention (Intra-Department Changes)
Changes in Patient Safety Culture in the Medical ICU–Control Group Following the Intervention (Intra-Department Changes)
Differences in Patient Safety Culture Between the Surgical ICU–Intervention Group and Medical ICU–Control Group in the Follow-Up Measurement (Inter-Department Differences)
- Supervisor/Manager Expectations (Mann–Whitney U test U = 357.5 p = 0.016, r = −0.276 [small to medium effect]).
- Management Support for Patient Safety (Mann–Whitney U test, U = 371.5 p = 0.025, r = −0.257 [small to medium effect].
- Staffing (Mann–Whitney U test, U = 257.5 p < 0.001, r = −0.412 [medium to large effect]).
- Nonpunitive Response to Errors (Mann–Whitney U test, U = 530, p < 0.001, r = −0.328 [medium effect]).
4. Discussion
Limitations and Strengths
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AEs | Adverse events |
ICU | Intensive care unit |
ICU-DRC | Intensive care unit discharge readiness checklist |
IG | Intervention group |
CG | Control group |
HSOPSC | Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture |
M | Median value |
IQR | Interquartile range |
PSC | Patient safety culture |
SSC | Surgical safety checklist |
WHO | World Health Organization |
Appendix A. Materials and Methods
The 12 Safety Culture Dimensions of the US Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture | |
---|---|
Safety Culture Dimensions | Items |
D1 Teamwork Within Units | A1 People support one another in this unit |
A3 When a lot of work needs to be done quickly, we work together as a team to get the work done | |
A4 In this unit, people treat each other with respect | |
A11 When one area in this unit gets really busy, others help out | |
D2 Supervisor/Manager Expectations | B1 My supervisor/manager says a good word when he/she sees a job done according to established patient safety procedures |
B2 My supervisor/manager seriously considers staff suggestions for improving patient safety | |
B3r Whenever pressure builds up, my supervisor/manager wants us to work faster, even if it means taking shortcuts | |
B4r My supervisor/manager overlooks patient safety problems that happen over and over (reverse worded) | |
D3 Organizational Learning–Continuous Improvement | A6 We are actively doing things to improve patient safety |
A9 Mistakes have led to positive changes here | |
A13 After we make changes to improve patient safety, we evaluate their effectiveness | |
D4 Management Support for Patient Safety | F1 Hospital management provides a work climate that promotes patient safety |
F8 The actions of hospital management show that patient safety is a top priority | |
F9r Hospital management seems interested in patient safety only after an adverse event happens (reverse worded) | |
D5 Overall Perceptions of Patient Safety | A15 Patient safety is never sacrificed to get more work done |
A18 Our procedures and systems are good at preventing errors from happening | |
A10r It is just by chance that more serious mistakes don’t happen around here (reverse worded) | |
A17r We have patient safety problems in this unit (reverse worded) | |
D6 Feedback Communication About Errors | C1 We are given feedback about changes put into place based on event reports |
C3 We are informed about errors that happen in this unit | |
C5 In this unit, we discuss ways to prevent errors from happening again | |
D7 Communication Openness | C2 Staff will freely speak up if they see something that may negatively affect patient care |
C4 Staff feel free to question the decisions or actions of those with more authority | |
C6r Staff are afraid to ask questions when something does not seem right (reverse worded) | |
D8 Frequency of Event Reporting | D1 When a mistake is made, but is caught and corrected before affecting the patient, how often is this reported? |
D2 When a mistake is made, but has no potential to harm the patient, how often is this reported? | |
D3 When a mistake is made that could harm the patient, but does not, how often is this reported? | |
D9 Teamwork Across Units | F4 There is good cooperation among hospital units that need to work together |
F10 Hospital units work well together to provide the best care for patients | |
F2r Hospital units do not coordinate well with each other (reverse worded) | |
F6r It is often unpleasant to work with staff from other hospital units (reverse worded) | |
D10 Staffing | A2 We have enough staff to handle the workload |
A5r Staff in this unit work longer hours than is best for patient care (reverse worded) | |
A7r We use more agency/temporary staff than is best for patient care (reverse worded) | |
A14r We work in ‘crisis mode’, trying to do too much, too quickly (reverse worded) | |
D11 Handoffs and Transitions | F3r Things “fall between the cracks” when transferring patients from one unit to another (reverse worded) |
F5r Important patient care information is often lost during shift changes (reverse worded) | |
F7r Problems often occur in the exchange of information across hospital units (reverse worded) | |
F11r Shift changes are problematic for patients in this hospital (reverse worded) | |
D12 Nonpunitive Response to Errors | A8r Staff feel like their mistakes are held against them (reverse worded) |
A12r When an event is reported, it feels like the person is being written up, not the problem (reverse worded) | |
A16r Staff worry that mistakes they make are kept in their personnel file (reverse worded) | |
Patient Safety Grade * | E1 Please give your work area/unit in this hospital an overall grade on patient safety |
Number of Events Reported † | G1 In the past 12 months, how many event reports have you filled out and submitted? |
Final List of ICU Discharge Criteria | Fit for ICU Discharge | Needs Further Intensive Care Therapy/Monitoring | Value Calculation Method to Evaluate Discharge Readiness | Criterion Importance Rank | Exceptions When “Mandatory to Be Met” | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Respiratory system | ||||||
1 | Is the patient’s (own/artificial) airway patent? | yes | no | n.a | mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits |
2 | Is the cough effective in a way that the patient can be handled at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits, p. with low level of consciousness and requiring long-term artificial airway aspiration |
3 | Blood oxygenation: Stable SpO2 (≥ 92% OR stable around lower patient individual baseline value) AND patient is breathing room air? | yes | no | Worst value must be above threshold value AND trend must be stable over defined time frame | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits, p. with chronic lung disease |
4 | Respiratory rate: Stable RR trend with 10 ≤ resp ≤ 30 (pm) OR patient’s individual baseline value is met? | yes | no | Worst value must be within acceptable range AND trend must be stable over defined time frame | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care |
5 | If further respiratory support is needed, feasible at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | |
6 | If the patient is in need of tracheal suctioning, feasible at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | |
7 | If the patient is in need of long-term tracheostomy, could adequate care be provided at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | If patient is sufficiently trained and capable to take care of the tracheostomy |
Cardiovascular system | ||||||
8 | Heart rate: Stable HR trend with 50 ≤ hr ≤ 110 (bpm) OR patient’s individual baseline value is met? | yes | no | Worst value must be within acceptable range AND trend must be stable over defined time frame | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits, pre-existing bradycardia |
9 | Cardiac rhythm: Stable cardiac rhythm OR tolerable intermittent arrhythmia over defined time frame? | yes | no | Trend must be stable over defined time frame | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits, p. has intermittent AF but is otherwise hemodynamically stable with controlled ventricular response |
10 | Mean arterial pressure: Stable MAP trend with 60 < map ≤ 110 (mmHg) OR patient’s individual baseline value is met? | yes | no | Worst value must be within acceptable range AND trend must be stable over defined time frame | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits |
11 | Hypervolemia/hypovolemia: Does the current volemia status require ICU monitoring? | no | yes | n.a | Mandatory to be met | |
12 | Hemoglobin value stable over defined time frame? | yes | no | Trend must be stable over defined time frame | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits |
13 | Significant active bleeding or high risk of significant bleeding? | no | yes | n.a | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits |
14 | If the patient needs continued monitoring at the receiving unit, are required technology/staff capabilities in place? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | |
15 | If the patient carries a percutaneous transient pacemaker, could that be handled at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | |
16 | If low-dose vasoactives are in use, is the patient manageable at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | |
Central nervous system | ||||||
17 | Can the neurological status of the patient be adequately handled and monitored at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | |
Pain | ||||||
18 | Pain therapy sufficient and feasible at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | |
Urogenital system | ||||||
19 | Do urine output, electrolyte level, and renal function allow patient discharge? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits |
20 | If required, is renal replacement therapy possible outside the ICU? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits |
Fluid loss and drainage | ||||||
21 | Could fluid loss or drainage(s) be monitored and handled adequately at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | Mandatory to be met | |
Medication and nutrition | ||||||
22 | If the patient needs continuous IV application (e.g., insulin, glucose, antibiotics, vasopressors, nutrition), allowed and feasible at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | mandatory to be met | |
Patient diagnosis, prognosis, and preferences | ||||||
23 | Patient’s preference is to stop intensive care therapy and to leave the ICU | yes | no | n.a | Not mandatory to be met | |
24 | Therapeutic susceptibility: Patient does not benefit from ICU care anymore and negative effects may outweigh | yes | no | n.a | mandatory to be met | |
Institution-specific criteria | ||||||
25 | Patient no longer meets ICU admission criteria and meets admission criteria for a lower level of care | yes | no | n.a | mandatory to be met | |
26 | Do current acuity and dependency levels and current workload at the receiving unit allow to admit and take care of this patient? | yes | no | n.a | mandatory to be met | |
27 | If the patient is immune compromised or infectious, could the patient be handled and adequately cared for at the receiving unit? | yes | no | n.a | mandatory to be met | |
28 | If discharge at night or weekend cannot be avoided, are measures in place to protect patient safety? | yes | no | n.a | mandatory to be met | EOL-care, agreed treatment limits, prioritarisation against patients with greater need for intensive care |
Appendix B. Results
Intervention Group | Control Group | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Survey time | December 2022 | January 2024 | December 2022 | January 2024 |
n = 62 | n = 56 | n = 19 | n = 20 | |
Characteristics | ||||
Profession | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) |
Doctor | 32 (51.6) | 23 (41.1) | 3 (15.8) | 5 (25) |
Nurse | 30 (48.4) | 33 (58.9) | 16 (84.2) | 15 (75) |
Years working in the profession | ||||
<1 | 2 (3.2) | 2 (3.6) | 1 (5.2) | 2 (10) |
1–5 | 13 (21) | 14 (25) | 12 (63.1) | 9 (45) |
6–10 | 17(27.4) | 17 (30.4) | 5 (26.3) | 6 (30) |
11–15 | 8 (12.9) | 6 (10.7) | 0 | 2 (10) |
16–20 | 11 (17.7) | 4 (7.1) | 0 | 1 (5) |
>21 | 11 (17.7) | 13 (23.2) | 1 (5.2) | 0 |
Years working in this department | ||||
<1 | 4 (6.5) | 2 (3.6) | 3 (15.8) | 3 (15) |
1–5 | 12 (19.4) | 13 (23.2) | 9 (47.4) | 7 (35) |
6–10 | 16 (25.8) | 18 (32.1) | 5 (26.3) | 7 (35) |
11–15 | 8 (12.9) | 7 (12.5) | 1 (5.2) | 3 (15) |
16–20 | 12 (19.4) | 9 (16.1) | 0 | 0 |
>21 | 10 (16.1) | 7 (12.5) | 1 (5.2) | 0 |
Years working at this hospital | ||||
<1 | 4 (6.5) | 2 (3.6) | 2 (10.5) | 3 (15) |
1–5 | 10 (16.1) | 12 (21.4) | 10 (52.6) | 7 (35) |
6–10 | 18 (29) | 17 (30.4) | 4 (21.1) | 6 (30) |
11–15 | 8 (12.9) | 7 (12.5) | 2 (10.5) | 3 (15) |
16–20 | 9 (14.5) | 9 (16.1) | 0 | 1 (5) |
>21 | 13 (21) | 9 (16.1) | 1 (5.2) | 0 |
Weekly working hours | ||||
<20 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
20–39 h a week | 1 (1.6) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
40–59 h a week | 4 (6.5) | 8 (14.3) | 0 | 2 (10) |
60–79 h a week | 52 (83.9) | 43 (76.8) | 19 (100) | 16 (80) |
80–99 h a week | 4 (6.5) | 3 (5.4) | 0 | 2 (10) |
>100 h a week | 1 (1.6) | 2 (3.6) | 0 | 0 |
Direct contact with patient | ||||
Yes | 62 (100) | 56 (100) | 19 (100) | 20 (100) |
No | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
December 2022 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Patient Safety Grade | Intervention Group | Control Group | Total | |
Please give your work area/unit in this hospital an overall grade on patient safety | Failing | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Poor | 2 | 0 | 2 | |
Acceptable | 17 | 3 | 20 | |
Very good | 25 | 9 | 34 | |
Excellent | 12 | 6 | 18 | |
Total | 56 | 18 | 74 |
January 2024 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Patient Safety Grade | Intervention Group | Control Group | Total | |
Please give your work area/unit in this hospital an overall grade on patient safety | Failing | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Poor | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
Acceptable | 16 | 7 | 23 | |
Very good | 23 | 8 | 31 | |
Excellent | 16 | 3 | 19 | |
Total | 56 | 20 | 76 |
December 2022 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Number of Events Reported | Intervention Group | Control Group | Total | |
In the past 12 months, how many event reports have you filled out and submitted? | No reports | 45 * | 11 | 56 |
1–2 reports | 14 | 4 | 18 | |
3–5 reports | 1 | 4 | 5 | |
6–10 reports | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
11–20 reports | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
Total | 62 | 19 | 81 |
January 2024 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Intervention Group | Control Group | Total | ||
In the past 12 months, how many event reports have you filled out and submitted? | None | 44 | 12 | 56 |
1–2 reports | 10 | 7 | 17 | |
3–5 reports | 2 | 1 | 3 | |
6–10 reports | ||||
11–20 reports | ||||
Total | 56 | 20 | 76 |
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Dimensions of Patient Safety Culture | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Median Values | |||||||||
Surgical ICU | Medical ICU | ||||||||
December 2022 | January 2024 | Δ * | Mann–Whitney U test | December 2022 | January 2024 | Δ * | Mann–Whitney U test | ||
D1 | Teamwork Within Units | 3.75 (min 2.00, max 5.00) | 4.00 (min 2.50, max 5.00) | 0.25 | U = 1272.5, p = 0.012, r = −0.232 (small to medium effect) | 4.13 (min 2.75, max 5.00) | 3.75 (min 2.50, max 5.00) | −0.38 | |
D2 | Supervisor/Manager Expectations | 3.80 (min 1.80, max 5.00) | 3.80 (min 1.80, max 5.00) | 0.00 | 3.30 (min 2.50, max 4.80) | 3.40 (min 1.50, max 5.00) | 0.10 | ||
D3 | Organizational Learning–Continuous Improvement | 3.00 (min 1.33, max 4.33) | 3.00 (min 1.67, max 4.33) | 0.00 | 3.00 (min 2.00, max 3.67) | 3.17 (min 2.33, max 4.33) | 0.17 | ||
D4 | Management Support for Patient Safety | 2.70 (min 1.00, max 4.70) | 3.00 (min 1.00, max 4.70) | 0.30 | 3.00 (min 2.00, max 4.30) | 2.70 (min 1.00, max 5.00) | −0.30 | U = 122.5, p = 0.056, (Bonferroni-corrected α = 0.025) r = −0.307 (medium effect) | |
D5 | Overall Perceptions of Patient Safety | 3.50 (min 1.50, max 5.00) | 3.80 (min 1.50, max 4.80) | 0.30 | 4.15 (min 2.80, max 5.00) | 3.40 (min 1.80, max 5.00) | −0.75 | U = 112, p = 0.028, (Bonferroni-corrected α = 0.025) r = −0.353 (medium effect) | |
D6 | Feedback Communication About Errors | 3.17 (min 1.00, max 5.00) | 3.50 (min 1.00, max 5.00) | 0.33 | 3.50 (min 1.67, max 4.67) | 3.33 (min 1.67, max 5.00) | −0.17 | ||
D7 | Communication Openness | 3.30 (min 1.70, max 4.70) | 3.70 (min 1.30, max 5.00) | 0.40 | 3.70 (min 1.30, max 4.70) | 3.15 (min 2.00, max 5.00) | −0.55 | ||
D8 | Frequency of Events Reported | 3.00 (min 1.00, max 5.00) | 3.00 (min 1.00, max 5.00) | 0.00 | 4.00 (min 1.00, max 5.00) | 3.67 (min 1.33, max 5.00) | −0.33 | ||
D9 | Teamwork Across Units | 3.00 (min 1.80, max 4.80) | 3.00 (min 2.00, max 4.50) | 0.00 | 3.15 (min 1.80, max 4.50) | 2.80 (min 1.30, max 5.00) | −0.35 | ||
D10 | Staffing | 3.00 (min 1.30, max 5.00) | 3.00 (min 1.30, max 4.80) | 0.00 | 2.80 (min 1.30, max 4.00) | 2.30 (min 1.00, max 3.50) | −0.50 | U = 120, p = 0.047, (Bonferroni-corrected α = 0.025), r = −0.318 (medium effect) | |
D11 | Handoffs and Transitions | 3.40 (min 2.00, max 5.00) | 3.80 (min 2.00, max 5.00) | 0.40 | 3.50 (min 2.00, max 5.00) | 3.50 (min 2.30, max 5.00) | 0.00 | ||
D12 | Nonpunitive Response to Errors | 2.70 (min 1.30, max 5.00) | 3.00 (min 1.30, max 5.00) | 0.30 | 3.15 (min 1.70, max 5.00) | 2.70 (min 1.00, max 3.70) | −0.45 | U = 97.5, p = 0.008, r = −0.420 (medium to large effect) |
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Vončina, V.; Brborović, H.; Brborović, O.; Makovšek, A.; Pavičić Šarić, J. Effects of Implementing an ICU Discharge Readiness Checklist on Patient Safety Culture: A Quasi-Experimental Research Study. Healthcare 2025, 13, 816. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13070816
Vončina V, Brborović H, Brborović O, Makovšek A, Pavičić Šarić J. Effects of Implementing an ICU Discharge Readiness Checklist on Patient Safety Culture: A Quasi-Experimental Research Study. Healthcare. 2025; 13(7):816. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13070816
Chicago/Turabian StyleVončina, Vanja, Hana Brborović, Ognjen Brborović, Alka Makovšek, and Jadranka Pavičić Šarić. 2025. "Effects of Implementing an ICU Discharge Readiness Checklist on Patient Safety Culture: A Quasi-Experimental Research Study" Healthcare 13, no. 7: 816. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13070816
APA StyleVončina, V., Brborović, H., Brborović, O., Makovšek, A., & Pavičić Šarić, J. (2025). Effects of Implementing an ICU Discharge Readiness Checklist on Patient Safety Culture: A Quasi-Experimental Research Study. Healthcare, 13(7), 816. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13070816