Are Medıcal Students Famılıar Wıth Patıent Safety Culture? A Cross-Sectıonal Study in Turkey

Background: Patient safety is a key indicator of healthcare quality. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the attitudes of medical students towards patient safety culture. Methods: The population of the study, which was designed as descriptive and cross-sectional, consisted of 369 fourth-, fi...

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Main Authors: Yasemin Aslan, Orhan Zengin, Ayşegül Karaca Dedeoğlu, Cenk Hilmi Kılıç
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ACHSM 2025-08-01
Series:Asia Pacific Journal of Health Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.achsm.org.au/index.php/achsm/article/view/3789
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author Yasemin Aslan
Orhan Zengin
Ayşegül Karaca Dedeoğlu
Cenk Hilmi Kılıç
author_facet Yasemin Aslan
Orhan Zengin
Ayşegül Karaca Dedeoğlu
Cenk Hilmi Kılıç
author_sort Yasemin Aslan
collection DOAJ
description Background: Patient safety is a key indicator of healthcare quality. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the attitudes of medical students towards patient safety culture. Methods: The population of the study, which was designed as descriptive and cross-sectional, consisted of 369 fourth-, fifth-, and sixth-year students studying at Karabük University Faculty of Medicine, while the sample consisted of 264 students who volunteered to participate in the study. Data were collected using a descriptive information form and the Medical Faculty Students' Attitude Scale Towards Patient Safety Culture. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and SPSS. Results: Most of the students stated that they did not receive any training regarding patient safety. It was determined that the sub-dimensions with the highest mean scores regarding the patient safety culture attitude of medical faculty students were working hours (87.98(±17.64)) and teamwork (83.74(±13.69)) as the cause of error. It was also found that the lowest mean score was in the sub-dimension (31.33(±22.77)) related to those who saw professional incompetence as the reason for the mistake. In addition, it was found that students had positive attitudes regarding the sub-dimensions of working hours, teamwork, the role of the patient in the error, and the importance of patient safety in the curriculum as reasons for errors. Conclusıon: Providing patient safety culture training to medical students before and during clinical practice, improving physicians’ working hours, promoting teamwork, and involving patients in the care process may positively influence students’ attitudes toward patient safety culture.
format Article
id doaj-art-158811b718a8495287bfde77d066da9c
institution Kabale University
issn 1833-3818
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language English
publishDate 2025-08-01
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series Asia Pacific Journal of Health Management
spelling doaj-art-158811b718a8495287bfde77d066da9c2025-08-20T04:01:16ZengACHSMAsia Pacific Journal of Health Management1833-38182204-31362025-08-01Are Medıcal Students Famılıar Wıth Patıent Safety Culture? A Cross-Sectıonal Study in TurkeyYasemin Aslan0Orhan Zengin1Ayşegül Karaca Dedeoğlu2Cenk Hilmi Kılıç3Healthcare Management, Faculty of Health Sciences, Bandırma Onyedi Eylül University, TürkiyeHealthcare Management, Faculty of Health Sciences, Marmara University, TürkiyeHealthcare Management, Faculty of Health Sciences, Karabük University, TürkiyeKoşuyolu High Specialization Education and Research Hospital, Türkiye Background: Patient safety is a key indicator of healthcare quality. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the attitudes of medical students towards patient safety culture. Methods: The population of the study, which was designed as descriptive and cross-sectional, consisted of 369 fourth-, fifth-, and sixth-year students studying at Karabük University Faculty of Medicine, while the sample consisted of 264 students who volunteered to participate in the study. Data were collected using a descriptive information form and the Medical Faculty Students' Attitude Scale Towards Patient Safety Culture. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and SPSS. Results: Most of the students stated that they did not receive any training regarding patient safety. It was determined that the sub-dimensions with the highest mean scores regarding the patient safety culture attitude of medical faculty students were working hours (87.98(±17.64)) and teamwork (83.74(±13.69)) as the cause of error. It was also found that the lowest mean score was in the sub-dimension (31.33(±22.77)) related to those who saw professional incompetence as the reason for the mistake. In addition, it was found that students had positive attitudes regarding the sub-dimensions of working hours, teamwork, the role of the patient in the error, and the importance of patient safety in the curriculum as reasons for errors. Conclusıon: Providing patient safety culture training to medical students before and during clinical practice, improving physicians’ working hours, promoting teamwork, and involving patients in the care process may positively influence students’ attitudes toward patient safety culture. https://journal.achsm.org.au/index.php/achsm/article/view/3789patient safety culture, attitude, medical students, medical error, patient safety
spellingShingle Yasemin Aslan
Orhan Zengin
Ayşegül Karaca Dedeoğlu
Cenk Hilmi Kılıç
Are Medıcal Students Famılıar Wıth Patıent Safety Culture? A Cross-Sectıonal Study in Turkey
Asia Pacific Journal of Health Management
patient safety culture, attitude, medical students, medical error, patient safety
title Are Medıcal Students Famılıar Wıth Patıent Safety Culture? A Cross-Sectıonal Study in Turkey
title_full Are Medıcal Students Famılıar Wıth Patıent Safety Culture? A Cross-Sectıonal Study in Turkey
title_fullStr Are Medıcal Students Famılıar Wıth Patıent Safety Culture? A Cross-Sectıonal Study in Turkey
title_full_unstemmed Are Medıcal Students Famılıar Wıth Patıent Safety Culture? A Cross-Sectıonal Study in Turkey
title_short Are Medıcal Students Famılıar Wıth Patıent Safety Culture? A Cross-Sectıonal Study in Turkey
title_sort are medical students familiar with patient safety culture a cross sectional study in turkey
topic patient safety culture, attitude, medical students, medical error, patient safety
url https://journal.achsm.org.au/index.php/achsm/article/view/3789
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AT orhanzengin aremedıcalstudentsfamılıarwıthpatıentsafetycultureacrosssectıonalstudyinturkey
AT aysegulkaracadedeoglu aremedıcalstudentsfamılıarwıthpatıentsafetycultureacrosssectıonalstudyinturkey
AT cenkhilmikılıc aremedıcalstudentsfamılıarwıthpatıentsafetycultureacrosssectıonalstudyinturkey