Quality evaluation of home nursing care: Perceptions of patients, physicians, and nurses (Reprinted from Nursing Administration Quarterly, vol 24, 2000)

Authors
Citation
Pa. Riccio, Quality evaluation of home nursing care: Perceptions of patients, physicians, and nurses (Reprinted from Nursing Administration Quarterly, vol 24, 2000), J NURS C Q, 15(2), 2001, pp. 58-67
Citations number
11
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science
Journal title
JOURNAL OF NURSING CARE QUALITY
ISSN journal
10573631 → ACNP
Volume
15
Issue
2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
58 - 67
Database
ISI
SICI code
1057-3631(200101)15:2<58:QEOHNC>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Perceptions of patients (n = 135), physicians (n = 99), and nurses (n = 20) regarding home nursing care were studied using a descriptive survey conduc ted over a 6-month period in a large, voluntary, nonprofit home health agen cy. An original instrument, based on the American Nurses Association standa rds of home nursing care within a nursing process framework, was developed for this study. Factor analyses (varimax rotation) yielded four subscales: technical, professional, communication/psychosocial, and teaching aspects o f nursing care. Overall, patients and physicians rated their satisfaction w ith nursing care identically (20% were satisfied, 71% were undecided, 9% we re dissatisfied), while 70 percent of the nurses were satisfied, 20 percent were undecided, and 10 percent were dissatisfied with their nursing care. Both physicians and patients were most satisfied with professional aspects of nursing care: nurses were most satisfied with teaching aspects. Patients and physicians were most dissatisfied with teaching; nurses were equally d issatisfied with technical skills and communication/psychosocial aspects of nursing care.