Development of an Instrument to Measure Patient Perception of the Quality of Nursing Care and Related Hospital Services at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka

This study aimed to develop and validate an instrument to measure patient perception of quality of nursing care and related hospital services in a tertiary care setting. Methods: We compiled an instrument with 72 items that patients may perceive as quality of nursing care and related hospital servic...

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Main Authors: Upul Senarat, MBBS, MSc, MD, Nalika S. Gunawardena, MBBS, MSc, MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2011-06-01
Series:Asian Nursing Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1976131711600157
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spelling doaj-99d93e8d2a9f4e48a4fbe98e724930d32020-11-25T00:20:40ZengElsevierAsian Nursing Research1976-13172011-06-0152718010.1016/S1976-1317(11)60015-7Development of an Instrument to Measure Patient Perception of the Quality of Nursing Care and Related Hospital Services at the National Hospital of Sri LankaUpul Senarat, MBBS, MSc, MDNalika S. Gunawardena, MBBS, MSc, MDThis study aimed to develop and validate an instrument to measure patient perception of quality of nursing care and related hospital services in a tertiary care setting. Methods: We compiled an instrument with 72 items that patients may perceive as quality of nursing care and related hospital services, following an extensive literature search, discussions with patients and care pro-I viders and a brainstorming session with an expert panel. A cross-sectional study was conducted at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka. A sample (n = 120) of patients stayed in general surgical or medical units responded to the interviewer administered instrument upon discharge. Item analysis and principal component factor analysis were performed to assess validity, and internal consistency was calculated to measure reliability. Results: Of the 72 items, 18 had greater than 20% of responses as ‘not relevant’. A further 11 items were eliminated since item-total correlations were less than .2. Factor analysis was performed on remaining 43 items which resulted in 36 items classifying into eight factors accounting for 71% of the variation. Factor loadings in the final solution after Varimax rotation were interpersonal aspects (.68–.85), efficiency (.62–.79), competency (.66–.68), comfort (.60–.84), physical environment (.65–.82), cleanliness (.81–.85), personalized information (.76–.83), and general instructions (.61–.78). The instrument had high Internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = .91). Conclusion: We developed a comprehensive, reliable and valid, 36-item instrument that may be used to measure patient perception of quality of nursing care in tertiary care settings.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1976131711600157nursing carenursing servicespatient satisfactionquality of health carevalidation studies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Upul Senarat, MBBS, MSc, MD
Nalika S. Gunawardena, MBBS, MSc, MD
spellingShingle Upul Senarat, MBBS, MSc, MD
Nalika S. Gunawardena, MBBS, MSc, MD
Development of an Instrument to Measure Patient Perception of the Quality of Nursing Care and Related Hospital Services at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka
Asian Nursing Research
nursing care
nursing services
patient satisfaction
quality of health care
validation studies
author_facet Upul Senarat, MBBS, MSc, MD
Nalika S. Gunawardena, MBBS, MSc, MD
author_sort Upul Senarat, MBBS, MSc, MD
title Development of an Instrument to Measure Patient Perception of the Quality of Nursing Care and Related Hospital Services at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka
title_short Development of an Instrument to Measure Patient Perception of the Quality of Nursing Care and Related Hospital Services at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka
title_full Development of an Instrument to Measure Patient Perception of the Quality of Nursing Care and Related Hospital Services at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka
title_fullStr Development of an Instrument to Measure Patient Perception of the Quality of Nursing Care and Related Hospital Services at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed Development of an Instrument to Measure Patient Perception of the Quality of Nursing Care and Related Hospital Services at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka
title_sort development of an instrument to measure patient perception of the quality of nursing care and related hospital services at the national hospital of sri lanka
publisher Elsevier
series Asian Nursing Research
issn 1976-1317
publishDate 2011-06-01
description This study aimed to develop and validate an instrument to measure patient perception of quality of nursing care and related hospital services in a tertiary care setting. Methods: We compiled an instrument with 72 items that patients may perceive as quality of nursing care and related hospital services, following an extensive literature search, discussions with patients and care pro-I viders and a brainstorming session with an expert panel. A cross-sectional study was conducted at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka. A sample (n = 120) of patients stayed in general surgical or medical units responded to the interviewer administered instrument upon discharge. Item analysis and principal component factor analysis were performed to assess validity, and internal consistency was calculated to measure reliability. Results: Of the 72 items, 18 had greater than 20% of responses as ‘not relevant’. A further 11 items were eliminated since item-total correlations were less than .2. Factor analysis was performed on remaining 43 items which resulted in 36 items classifying into eight factors accounting for 71% of the variation. Factor loadings in the final solution after Varimax rotation were interpersonal aspects (.68–.85), efficiency (.62–.79), competency (.66–.68), comfort (.60–.84), physical environment (.65–.82), cleanliness (.81–.85), personalized information (.76–.83), and general instructions (.61–.78). The instrument had high Internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = .91). Conclusion: We developed a comprehensive, reliable and valid, 36-item instrument that may be used to measure patient perception of quality of nursing care in tertiary care settings.
topic nursing care
nursing services
patient satisfaction
quality of health care
validation studies
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1976131711600157
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