Federal Register: September 23, 2002 (Volume 67, Number 184)
DOCID: FR Doc 02-24184
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
NOTICE: NOTICES
ACTION: Agency information collection activities:
DOCUMENT ACTION: Notice.
SUBJECT CATEGORY:
Agency Information Collection Activities: Proposed Collection; Comment Request
DATES: Comments on this notice must be received by November 22, 2002.
DOCUMENT SUMMARY:
This notice announces the intention of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to request the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to allow the proposed information collection project: ``Pilot Data for the Development of a Hospital Patient Safety Culture Survey''. In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 10413 (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)), AHRQ invites the public to comment on this proposed information collection.
SUMMARY:
Proposed collection; comment request,
SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION
Proposed Project
``Pilot Data for the Development of a Hospital Patient Safety Culture Survey''
The project is being conducted in partial response to an AHRQ task order entitled ``Patient Safety Measures'' (issued under Contract 290 960004). With AHRQ's Director chairing the Quality Interagency Coordination Task Force (QuIC), AHRQ coordinated the Federal response to the Institute of Medicine's (IOM) 1999 report on medical errors. The response outlined specific initiatives the QuIC agencies would take. This project addresses the need, for a measurement tool to assess patient safety culture within health care institutions is one of those initiatives. The project is to develop a hospital patient safety culture survey, conduct cognitive pretesting, collect pilot data using the survey, analyze the pilot data to determine the psychometric properties of the survey (internal consistency, reliability, response variability, etc.), and then, to prepare survey administration procedures accordingly.
The overall goal of this study is to provide AHRQ with a reliable employee survey instrument to assess a hospital's patient safety culture. The survey instrument will be made publicly available to enable hospitals throughout the nation to evaluate aspects of their organizational culture that impact medical errors, error reporting, and patient safety.
The hospital patient safety culture survey to be pilot tested for
this project is an employee survey that places an emphasis on medical
error reporting. The survey also includes scales that measure other aspects of organizational
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culture that impact patient safety, such as: organizational learning,
overall perceptions of safety, compliance with procedures, attitudes
and frequency of error reporting, nonpunitive response to error,
reasons errors occur, and employee teamwork. Through the proposed
project, a reliable hospital patient safety culture survey will be
developed and then made available to the public, to reduce the burden
of hospitals in developing their own instruments, to reduce the
proliferation and use of untested instruments, and to foster benchmarking across hospitals.
Method of Collection
The purpose of this pilot data collection is to gather enough survey responses to evaluate the internal consistency, reliability, response variability, and other psychometric properties of a newly developed survey, not to produce national estimates. Therefore, a purposive sample (handchosen, nonstatistical sample) of 12 hospitals will suffice to participate in the study. Hospitals will be selected based on two factors: bed size and teaching vs. nonteaching status (2 large/teaching, 2 medium/teaching, 2 small/teaching, 2 large/non teaching, 2 medium/nonteaching, 2 small/nonteaching).
Surveys will be distributed to 100 employees at each of the 12 sites (a total of 1,200 employees). A contact person at each hospital will be asked to select 100 employees using a systematic random sample of employees. The contact person at each hospital will distribute the paper surveys to the 100 selected employees at each site. For purposes of individual confidentiality, no individual identifiers will be used, so it will not be possible to track individual responses. Respondents will be instructed to mail their completed surveys directly to the research organization conducting the study using a postagepaid return envelope that will be provided. The hospitals will at no time have access to individual responses.
The survey will be distributed to a total of 1,200 hospital
employees (100 individuals at each of 12 hospitals), with a target
response rate of 75%, or 900 returned surveys. Standard techniques like
using a prenotification letter, a cover letter of support from the
hospital, a followup postcard, and distribution of a second survey
will be used to achieve the target response rate. Respondents should
take approximately 20 minutes to complete the survey. Therefore, we
estimate that the respondent burden for completing the survey will be
300 hours (900 completes multiplied by 20 minutes per completed survey).
Estimated Annual Respondent Burden:
Estimated time
Date collection effort Number of per respondent Estimated total
respondents (minutes) burden hours
Safety Culture Survey Pilot.................................. 900 20 300
Respondents will not be asked to maintain any records. No additional equipment purchases will be made to support data collection processes or record keeping. Respondents will incur no monetary cost in completing the survey.
Estimated Annual Costs to the Federal Government
The total cost to the Government for conducting this survey development project is approximately $227,000 which includes the cost of survey development, pretesting, data collection, analysis, preparation of survey administration procedures, and preparation of a final report. The estimated cost of the data collection component is $50,000, which includes labor costs, fringe expenses, administrative expenses, and costs associated with copying, postage, and telephone expenses.
Request for Comments
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction legislation cited in the
summary section above, comments on the AHRQ information collection
proposal are requested with regard to any of the following:
(a) Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for
the proper performance of functions of the Agency, including whether the information will have practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the Agency's estimate of the burden (including
hours and costs) of the proposed collection of information;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information on respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information technology.
(d) Ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information on
respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information technology.
Comments submitted in response to this notice will be summarized
and included in the request for OMB approval of the proposed
information collection. All comments will become a matter of public record.
Dated: September 17, 2002.
Carolyn M. Clancy,
Acting Director.
[FR Doc. 0224184 Filed 92002; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 416090M
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
Cynthia D. McMichael, AHRQ Reports Clearance Officer, (301) 5943132.