Where There’s Smoke: Validating a Nonproprietary Single-Item Burnout-Impacting-Safety Scale

This study aimed to assess the utility of a single survey item to predict the impact of burnout on safety and quality of healthcare providers as perceived by their colleagues. The primary objective is to determine if the item predicts the frequency of patient safety event reports within certain...

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Main Authors: Amanda Pearl, Steve Mrozowski, Daniel E. Shapiro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Patient Safety Authority 2021-06-01
Series:Patient Safety
Subjects:
Online Access:https://patientsafetyj.com/index.php/patientsaf/article/view/455
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spelling doaj-de377c4eab674793b025b5e99e22475e2021-06-22T13:06:38ZengPatient Safety AuthorityPatient Safety2641-47162021-06-013210.33940/culture/2021.6.3Where There’s Smoke: Validating a Nonproprietary Single-Item Burnout-Impacting-Safety ScaleAmanda Pearl0Steve Mrozowski1Daniel E. Shapiro2Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Milton S. Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center This study aimed to assess the utility of a single survey item to predict the impact of burnout on safety and quality of healthcare providers as perceived by their colleagues. The primary objective is to determine if the item predicts the frequency of patient safety event reports within certain clinical departments. The secondary objective will be to determine if there is an acceptable cutoff score for the item which predicts low versus high numbers of safety events reported by healthcare providers in each clinical department. Participants were 424 healthcare providers in an academic medical center in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States. The item was designed to assess for the perception of the impact of burnout on work in terms of quality or safety using a 5-point Likert scale. Data from a patient safety event reporting system was accessed for the year of survey completion (2017). A negative binomial regression was used to assess the ability of the item to predict reported patient safety event reports. The item was found to significantly predict objective safety event data. Sensitivity and specificity, as well as receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analyses, were conducted to determine appropriateness of cutoff scores to identify low- and high-risk clinical departments. The item was found to demonstrate adequate sensitivity (82%) using a cutoff score of 4 on the survey item. However, the area under the curves (AUCs) which assess diagnostic accuracy fell in the poor range. These results suggest that healthcare administrators could deploy this single item as a brief pulse or screener of teams of individuals who are within a work unit and use a cutoff score of 4 as a means to assess for hot spots where healthcare provider burnout may be putting patients at high risk in terms of safety. Correction: This article was corrected on June 4, 2021, to fix a numerical error in the x-axis of Figure 1. https://patientsafetyj.com/index.php/patientsaf/article/view/455patient safetyburnoutmedical errorspatient carearea under curve
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amanda Pearl
Steve Mrozowski
Daniel E. Shapiro
spellingShingle Amanda Pearl
Steve Mrozowski
Daniel E. Shapiro
Where There’s Smoke: Validating a Nonproprietary Single-Item Burnout-Impacting-Safety Scale
Patient Safety
patient safety
burnout
medical errors
patient care
area under curve
author_facet Amanda Pearl
Steve Mrozowski
Daniel E. Shapiro
author_sort Amanda Pearl
title Where There’s Smoke: Validating a Nonproprietary Single-Item Burnout-Impacting-Safety Scale
title_short Where There’s Smoke: Validating a Nonproprietary Single-Item Burnout-Impacting-Safety Scale
title_full Where There’s Smoke: Validating a Nonproprietary Single-Item Burnout-Impacting-Safety Scale
title_fullStr Where There’s Smoke: Validating a Nonproprietary Single-Item Burnout-Impacting-Safety Scale
title_full_unstemmed Where There’s Smoke: Validating a Nonproprietary Single-Item Burnout-Impacting-Safety Scale
title_sort where there’s smoke: validating a nonproprietary single-item burnout-impacting-safety scale
publisher Patient Safety Authority
series Patient Safety
issn 2641-4716
publishDate 2021-06-01
description This study aimed to assess the utility of a single survey item to predict the impact of burnout on safety and quality of healthcare providers as perceived by their colleagues. The primary objective is to determine if the item predicts the frequency of patient safety event reports within certain clinical departments. The secondary objective will be to determine if there is an acceptable cutoff score for the item which predicts low versus high numbers of safety events reported by healthcare providers in each clinical department. Participants were 424 healthcare providers in an academic medical center in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States. The item was designed to assess for the perception of the impact of burnout on work in terms of quality or safety using a 5-point Likert scale. Data from a patient safety event reporting system was accessed for the year of survey completion (2017). A negative binomial regression was used to assess the ability of the item to predict reported patient safety event reports. The item was found to significantly predict objective safety event data. Sensitivity and specificity, as well as receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analyses, were conducted to determine appropriateness of cutoff scores to identify low- and high-risk clinical departments. The item was found to demonstrate adequate sensitivity (82%) using a cutoff score of 4 on the survey item. However, the area under the curves (AUCs) which assess diagnostic accuracy fell in the poor range. These results suggest that healthcare administrators could deploy this single item as a brief pulse or screener of teams of individuals who are within a work unit and use a cutoff score of 4 as a means to assess for hot spots where healthcare provider burnout may be putting patients at high risk in terms of safety. Correction: This article was corrected on June 4, 2021, to fix a numerical error in the x-axis of Figure 1.
topic patient safety
burnout
medical errors
patient care
area under curve
url https://patientsafetyj.com/index.php/patientsaf/article/view/455
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