Startsida
Hjälp
Sök i LIBRIS databas

     

 

Sökning: onr:5hl0lcvq3q0dvgt5 > Development of stra...

Development of strategic and clinical quality indicators in postoperative pain management / Ewa Idvall.

Idvall, Ewa, 1950- (författare)
Hamrin, Elisabeth, 1931- (preses)
Gaston-Johansson, Fannie (opponent)
Linköpings universitet. Institutionen för medicin och hälsa (utgivare)
Alternativt namn: Engelska: Linköping Universty. Department of Medical and Health Sciences
Alternativt namn: Linköping Universty. Department of Medicine and Health Sciences
Alternativt namn: IMH
Se även: Linköpings universitet. Institutionen för hälsa och samhälle
Se även: Linköpings universitet. Institutionen för medicin och vård
Linköpings universitet Hälsouniversitetet (utgivare)
Publicerad: Linköping : Department of Medicine and Care, Linköpings universitet, 2001
Engelska 1 onlineresurs (70 sidor)
Serie: Linköping University Medical Dissertations, 0345-0082 ; 671
Läs hela texten (Sammanfattning och ramberättelse från Linköping University Electronic Press)
Läs hela texten
  • E-bokAvhandling(Diss. (sammanfattning) Linköping : Linköpings universitet, 2001)
Sammanfattning Ämnesord
Stäng  
  • The aim of this thesis was to identify important aspects of surgical nursing care, designing strategic and clinical quality indicators in postoperative pain management, investigate content validity, develop and evaluate psychometric properties of an instrument to measure the indicators, test the applicability of the instrument and investigate patient and nurse assessment. To identify the important aspects of nursing care which might impact on quality of care in surgical wards, it was conducted 4 focus group interviews with clinical nurses (n=20). A tentative model with 15 categories in 2 dimensions, elements of performance and prerequisites, emerged from the data analysis. The categories were, e.g. detecting and acting on signs and symptoms, informing and educating, promoting relationships, responsibility and attitudes. The model was used as a foundation for developing indicators in postoperative pain management, one in each category, each supported by a literature review. To assess the content validity of the indicators, a questionnaire was compiled and sent to registered nurses with a special interest in pain (n=210) and to a random sample of clinical nurses working in surgical wards (n=321). The groups assessed the indicators as essential for achieving high quality, realistic to carry out and possible for nurses to influence management. The first group validated 14 of the 15 indicators and the second group validated 12 as “major” factors in terms of being essential to achieve high quality of care. The remaining factors were classified as “supportive”. No indicator was discarded. To measure the indicators, an instrument was developed and psychometric properties were evaluated. The indicators were converted to statements suitable for a patient questionnaire and were scored on a 5-point scale with higher values indicating higher quality of care. Patients (n=198) answered the questionnaire on their second postoperative day. The inter-item and item-total correlation coefficients were in a satisfactory range, and Cronbach’s coefficient alpha (0.84) supported internal consistency reliability. Four sub-scales, entitled communication, action, trust and environment emerged from the factor analysis with a total variance of 61.4%. The total scale correlated (rs=0.53) with the single item pain-relief-satisfaction question. The patients who reported more pain than expected scored lower on the total scale and the patients who received epidural analgesia reported higher scores on the total scale. A nurse questionnaire, similar to the patient questionnaire, was compiled. The responsible nurse at the time (n=63) answered 196 questionnaires paired with the individual patient. The new instrument appeared to be useful in identifying important areas for improvement both from the patients’ and nurses’ perspectives, based on the number of disagreements (1 and 2). Differences were found among departments. The patients’ assessments on the environment sub-scale and the overall satisfaction question were higher than the nurses’ assessments. The findings suggest initial support for the instrument as a means to measure the quality of nursing care in postoperative pain management. Key words: quality indicators; health care, pain; postoperative, focus groups, psychometrics, questionnaires, nursing care. 

Ämnesord

Omvårdnad  (sao)
Anestesi  (sao)
Pain, postoperative: therapy  (MeSH)
Medical and Health Sciences  (ssif)
Medicin och hälsovetenskap  (ssif)
MEDICINE  (svep)
MEDICIN  (svep)
Nursing  (LCSH)
Anesthesia  (LCSH)

Indexterm och SAB-rubrik

quality indicators; health care
pain; postoperative
focus

Klassifikation

617.0231 (DDC)
Vpd (kssb/8 (machine generated))
Inställningar Hjälp

Titeln finns på 1 bibliotek. 

Bibliotek i östra Sverige (1)

Ange som favorit
Om LIBRIS
Sekretess
Hjälp
Fel i posten?
Kontakt
Teknik och format
Sök utifrån
Sökrutor
Plug-ins
Bookmarklet
Anpassa
Textstorlek
Kontrast
Vyer
LIBRIS söktjänster
SwePub
Uppsök

Kungliga biblioteket hanterar dina personuppgifter i enlighet med EU:s dataskyddsförordning (2018), GDPR. Läs mer om hur det funkar här.
Så här hanterar KB dina uppgifter vid användning av denna tjänst.

Copyright © LIBRIS - Nationella bibliotekssystem

 
pil uppåt Stäng

Kopiera och spara länken för att återkomma till aktuell vy