Not just a ‘nice to have’: Team compassionate care behaviours and patient safety

Author:

Wang Karyn LORCID,de Montemas William,Dey Shanta,Johnson AnyaORCID,Nguyen Helena1ORCID,Tuqiri Karen2,Crawford Barb3,Murray Suzanne4

Affiliation:

1. Work and Organisational Studies, The University of Sydney Business School, The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia

2. Prince of Wales Hospital, South Eastern Sydney Local Health District, NSW, Australia

3. Illawarra Shoalhaven Local Health District, NSW, Australia

4. South Eastern Sydney Local Health District, NSW, Australia

Abstract

The experience of suffering is ubiquitous in healthcare facilities, but against this backdrop, is compassion a ‘nice to have’ or does it also affect patient safety? This article uses mixed methods across two studies to understand team compassionate care behaviours as a shared unit property and its association with patient safety outcomes. Using data from 188 healthcare teams, Study 1 finds that team compassionate care behaviours mediated the relationship between team psychological safety and fewer patient hospital-associated infections. Furthermore, the positive relationship between team psychological safety and team compassionate care behaviours was weakened when team workload demands were high. In Study 2, we interviewed 25 nurses to understand the experiences and gain further insights into the relationships between the focal variables. Together, our findings provide evidence that compassion emerges at the team level, is driven by team antecedents, moderated by team environments and tangibly affects patient safety. JEL Classification: M00

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference94 articles.

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2. Patients' and relatives' experiences and perspectives of 'Good' and 'Not so Good' quality care

3. Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care (ACSQHC) (2018) Hospital-acquired complication – 3: Healthcare-associated infection fact sheet. Available at: https://www.safetyandquality.gov.au/sites/default/files/migrated/Healthcare-associated-infection-detailed-fact-sheet.pdf

4. A concept analysis of nurse–patient trust

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