The Effects of Patient and Nursing Unit Characteristics on Outcomes among Hospitalized Patients with Chronic Illness in Thailand

The purpose of this cross-sectional correlational study was to examine the effects of patient and nursing unit characteristics on nursing-sensitive patient outcomes. The conceptual framework for this study is generated from the Quality Health Outcomes Model. The patient characteristics were patient...

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Main Author: Meeboon, Sriwan
Other Authors: Insel, Kathleen C.
Language:EN
Published: The University of Arizona. 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194037
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1940372015-10-23T04:40:26Z The Effects of Patient and Nursing Unit Characteristics on Outcomes among Hospitalized Patients with Chronic Illness in Thailand Meeboon, Sriwan Insel, Kathleen C. Insel, Kathleen C. Verran, Joyce A. Jones, Elaine patient characteristics nursing unit characteristics confidence in self-care perception of being well-cared for The purpose of this cross-sectional correlational study was to examine the effects of patient and nursing unit characteristics on nursing-sensitive patient outcomes. The conceptual framework for this study is generated from the Quality Health Outcomes Model. The patient characteristics were patient age, gender, education, duration of illness, severity of illness, and illness representation. The nursing unit characteristics were nurse experience, nurse staffing, nursing unit competency, and group cohesion. Nursing-sensitive patient outcomes were patient’s confidence in self-care and patient’s perception of being well-cared for. Stratified sampling was employed to recruit a sample of 130 hospitalized chronically ill patients in 8 medical care units of 4 hospitals in Thailand. A face-to-face questionnaire interview was used to collect data from patients. A self-administered questionnaire was used to collect data from 90. Nurse staffing data were obtained from nursing administrative data for each unit. Multiple regression analyses were used to examine the relationships, test a mediator, and analyze the contextual effect of the study variables. Severity of illness (β = -.315, p <.01) and illness representation (β = -.234, p < .05) were significant predictors of patient’s confidence in self-care, when controlling for nursing unit characteristics. Illness representation partially mediated the relationship between severity of illness and patient’s confidence in self-care. Nursing unit characteristics were not significant predictors of patient’s confidence in self-care, when controlling for patient characteristics. There was a significant individual effect on patient’s confidence in self-care. Severity of illness (r = -.199, p < .05) and group cohesion (r = -.195, p < .05) were correlated with patient’s perception of being well-cared for. The findings of this study reinforce the need for acute care nurses to be aware of how chronically ill patients perceive health threats since illness representation directly affects patient’s confidence in self-care. Through understanding the role of illness representation as a mediator between severity of illness and confidence in self-care, it is suggested that nurses can improve patient’s confidence in self-care in severely ill patients by providing nursing interventions that promote positive illness representation. 2006 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194037 659746422 1867 EN Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic patient characteristics
nursing unit characteristics
confidence in self-care
perception of being well-cared for
spellingShingle patient characteristics
nursing unit characteristics
confidence in self-care
perception of being well-cared for
Meeboon, Sriwan
The Effects of Patient and Nursing Unit Characteristics on Outcomes among Hospitalized Patients with Chronic Illness in Thailand
description The purpose of this cross-sectional correlational study was to examine the effects of patient and nursing unit characteristics on nursing-sensitive patient outcomes. The conceptual framework for this study is generated from the Quality Health Outcomes Model. The patient characteristics were patient age, gender, education, duration of illness, severity of illness, and illness representation. The nursing unit characteristics were nurse experience, nurse staffing, nursing unit competency, and group cohesion. Nursing-sensitive patient outcomes were patient’s confidence in self-care and patient’s perception of being well-cared for. Stratified sampling was employed to recruit a sample of 130 hospitalized chronically ill patients in 8 medical care units of 4 hospitals in Thailand. A face-to-face questionnaire interview was used to collect data from patients. A self-administered questionnaire was used to collect data from 90. Nurse staffing data were obtained from nursing administrative data for each unit. Multiple regression analyses were used to examine the relationships, test a mediator, and analyze the contextual effect of the study variables. Severity of illness (β = -.315, p <.01) and illness representation (β = -.234, p < .05) were significant predictors of patient’s confidence in self-care, when controlling for nursing unit characteristics. Illness representation partially mediated the relationship between severity of illness and patient’s confidence in self-care. Nursing unit characteristics were not significant predictors of patient’s confidence in self-care, when controlling for patient characteristics. There was a significant individual effect on patient’s confidence in self-care. Severity of illness (r = -.199, p < .05) and group cohesion (r = -.195, p < .05) were correlated with patient’s perception of being well-cared for. The findings of this study reinforce the need for acute care nurses to be aware of how chronically ill patients perceive health threats since illness representation directly affects patient’s confidence in self-care. Through understanding the role of illness representation as a mediator between severity of illness and confidence in self-care, it is suggested that nurses can improve patient’s confidence in self-care in severely ill patients by providing nursing interventions that promote positive illness representation.
author2 Insel, Kathleen C.
author_facet Insel, Kathleen C.
Meeboon, Sriwan
author Meeboon, Sriwan
author_sort Meeboon, Sriwan
title The Effects of Patient and Nursing Unit Characteristics on Outcomes among Hospitalized Patients with Chronic Illness in Thailand
title_short The Effects of Patient and Nursing Unit Characteristics on Outcomes among Hospitalized Patients with Chronic Illness in Thailand
title_full The Effects of Patient and Nursing Unit Characteristics on Outcomes among Hospitalized Patients with Chronic Illness in Thailand
title_fullStr The Effects of Patient and Nursing Unit Characteristics on Outcomes among Hospitalized Patients with Chronic Illness in Thailand
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Patient and Nursing Unit Characteristics on Outcomes among Hospitalized Patients with Chronic Illness in Thailand
title_sort effects of patient and nursing unit characteristics on outcomes among hospitalized patients with chronic illness in thailand
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194037
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