RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture: psychometric evaluation in Kuwaiti public healthcare settings JF BMJ Open JO BMJ Open FD British Medical Journal Publishing Group SP e028666 DO 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028666 VO 9 IS 5 A1 Gheed Al Salem A1 Paul Bowie A1 Jill Morrison YR 2019 UL http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/5/e028666.abstract AB Objective As healthcare organisations endeavour to improve the quality and safety of their services, there is increasing recognition of the importance of building a culture of safety to promote patient safety and improve the outcomes of patient care. Surveys of safety culture/climate have not knowingly been conducted in Kuwait public hospitals, nor are valid or reliable survey instruments available for this context. This study aims to investigate the psychometric properties of the HSOPSC (Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture) tool in Kuwaiti public hospitals in addition to constructing an optimal model to assess the level of safety climate in this setting.Design Cross-sectional study.Setting Three public hospitals in Kuwait.Participants About 1317 healthcare professionals.Main outcome measure An adapted and contextualised version of HSOPSC was used to conduct psychometric evaluation including exploratory factor analysis, confirmatory factor analysis reliability and correlation analysis.Results 1317 questionnaires (87%) were returned. Psychometric evaluation, showed an optimal model of eight factors and 22 safety climate items. All items have strong factor loadings (0.42–0.86) and are theoretically related. Reliability analysis showed satisfactory results (α >0.60).Conclusions This is the first validation study of a standardised safety climate measure in a Kuwaiti healthcare setting. An optimal model for assessing patient safety climate was produced that mirrors other international studies and which can be used for measuring the prevailing safety climate. More importance should be attached to the psychometric fidelity of safety climate questionnaires before extending their use in other healthcare culture and contexts internationally.