Abstract:
Safety culture is how safety is considered by employees and the availability of systems to promote safety in an organization. It is essential to ensure that medication dispensing takes place in an environment with optimum
safety culture since it is a vital step in the treatment process. The objective of the present study was to assess the effectiveness of an educational intervention to improve safety culture, as perceived by pharmacists involved in
the dispensing process of a selected teaching hospital in Sri Lanka. This was an interventional, cross-sectional study conducted between January 2018 and May 2018. An interviewer-administered questionnaire, developed
in-house, based on published literature (and content validated), was administered to all dispensing pharmacists (N=19). Two weeks later, participants attended an educational workshop on safety culture as the intervention.
In addition, an educational poster developed at the workshop by pharmacists themselves was displayed in the working pharmacy, and a study pack on safety culture (based on the workshop content) was given to each
participant. The same questionnaire was repeated one month after the workshop. Safety culture was assessed in terms of six domains (environmental factors, human factors, communication, supervision, documentation and
reactions to mistakes). The Mean Composite Scores (MCSs) were calculated for each domain before and after the study for comparison. There was no statistically significant difference (p>0.05) between the before and after
MCSs of any domain. However, results indicated an improving trend in knowledge of safety culture among pharmacists as the total number of “ Don’t know” responses had reduced from 25 to 11. The present study implies
that educational interventions alone have little effect in enhancing a safety culture in the dispensing process.