scholarly journals User satisfaction with nursing care in the hospital environment / Satisfação dos usuários com os cuidados de enfermagem no ambiente hospitalar

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 1068-1074
Author(s):  
Leandro Cardozo dos Santos Brito ◽  
Haylla Simone Almeida Pacheco ◽  
Paula de Moura Lopes ◽  
José Wicto Pereira Borges ◽  
Fernando Ferraz do Nascimento ◽  
...  

Objetivo: analisar o nível de satisfação dos usuários com os cuidados de enfermagem no ambiente hospitalar. Método: estudo transversal, analítico, quantitativo, realizado com 101 pacientes de um hospital do Centro-Sul do Piauí, no período de março de 2016 a janeiro de 2017. Utilizou-se a “Escala de satisfação do cliente” da Classificação dos Resultados de Enfermagem, com análise dos resultados a partir do Software Statistic Package for Social Sciences. Resultados: os pacientes se mostraram satisfeitos com os cuidados de enfermagem (58,4%). As variáveis que apresentaram associação estatisticamente significante com a satisfação foram “raça/cor” (p=0,028) e “situação conjugal” (p=0,030), além dos indicadores “alimentar-se” (p=0,018) e “higiene” (p=0,035) da escala de autocuidado. Conclusão: a satisfação dos pacientes permite a identificação de potencialidades e deficiências fornecendo contribuições para a reorganização das atividades assistenciais, gerenciais e de ensino.

Author(s):  
Cláudia Chaves ◽  
João Duarte ◽  
Odete Amaral ◽  
Emília Coutinho ◽  
Paula Nelas

Abstract.Introduction: Patient satisfaction is an essential indicator for assessment of the quality of care and there is evidence of its correlation with health outcomes. Satisfaction with health care is a multidimensional concept which considers aspects such as access, organization and patient-professional interactions. We believe that the nursing care, in particular, are critical in the health/disease process.Objectives: Validate a scale to assess the satisfaction of users with regard to nursing care, adapted from EUROPEP instrument and assess the satisfaction of users of the primary health care of the central region of Portugal.Methods: Cross-sectional study with a sample of 827 adult users (female 64.4%) with a mean age of 50,08±18,58 years. Data were collected through a questionnaire consisting of socio-demographic variables, the instrument EUROPEP (Ferreira, 1995) to assess satisfaction with primary health care and to assess satisfaction specifically with the nursing team we have created issues grouped in the help relationship, interpersonal and instrumental dimension. Internal consistency, reproducibility and content analysis were evaluated using the SPSS 23.0; considering the consistency acceptable to an α of Cronbach’s alpha > 0.70. The coefficient for each item is presented with a confidence interval of 95%.Results: In all dimensions of EUROPEP questionnaire, the highest percentage of satisfaction with the care was between "good" and "very good". The dimensions created to evaluate specifically the nursing care showed a Cronbach's alpha coefficient of α total of 0.972.Conclusions: These results suggest that the dimensions created to evaluate nursing care will be useful for research on the Portuguese population. User satisfaction is crucial to the quality and efficiency of care, requiring the commitment of all service providers on implementation of systematic management practices leading to satisfaction, giving particular attention to the continuous improvement of organizational processes.Keywords: Patient satisfaction; primary health care; nursing care, adult, PortugalResumo.SATISFAÇÃO DOS UTENTES DOS CUIDADOS DE SAÚDE PRIMÁRIOS COM OS CUIDADOS DE ENFERMAGEM – AMOSTRA DA REGIÃO CENTRO DE PORTUGALIntrodução: A satisfação dos doentes constitui um indicador indispensável para a avaliação da qualidade dos cuidados e há evidência da sua correlação com os resultados em saúde. A satisfação com os cuidados de saúde é um conceito multidimensional que considera aspetos como acesso, organização e interação doente - profissional. Consideramos que os cuidados de enfermagem, em particular, são fundamentais no processo saúde/doença.Objetivos: Validar uma escala para avaliar a satisfação dos utentes face aos cuidados de enfermagem, adaptado do instrumento EUROPEP e avaliar a satisfação dos utentes dos cuidados de saúde primários da região centro de Portugal.Material e métodos: Estudo transversal, com uma amostra de 827 utentes adultos (maioria do sexo feminino 64,4%) com uma média de idade de 50,08±18,58 anos. Os dados foram recolhidos através de um questionário, constituído por variáveis sociodemográficas, o instrumento EUROPEP (Ferreira, 1995) para avaliar a satisfação com os cuidados de saúde primários e para avaliar a satisfação especificamente com a equipa de enfermagem elaboramos questões adaptadas do instrumento EUROPEP e agrupadas nas dimensões relação de ajuda, dimensão interpessoal e instrumental. A consistência interna, reprodutibilidade e análise de conteúdo foram avaliados com recurso ao SPSS 23.0; considerando a consistência aceitável para um de Cronbach > 0,70. O coeficiente para cada item é apresentado com um intervalo de confiança de 95%.Resultados: Em todas as dimensões do questionário EUROPEP, a maior percentagem de satisfação com os cuidados situou-se entre “boa” e “muito boa”. As dimensões criadas para avaliar especificamente os cuidados de enfermagem apresentaram um coeficiente de α de Cronbach total de 0,972.Conclusões: Estes resultados sugerem que as dimensões criadas para avaliar os cuidados de enfermagem serão úteis para a investigação na população Portuguesa. A satisfação do utente é decisiva para a qualidade e eficiência dos cuidados prestados, sendo necessário o compromisso de todos os prestadores na implementação de práticas sistemáticas de gestão que conduzam à satisfação, dando particular atenção à melhoria contínua dos processos organizacionais.Palavras-chave: Satisfação dos Utentes; cuidados de saúde primários, cuidados de enfermagem, adulto, Portugal


Part 1. General principles of first aid for nurses outside the emergency department environment Medical emergencies 1025 General principles of first aid for nurses 1026 Priorities when faced with an emergency situation 1028 Care of the unconscious patient (both within and outside the hospital environment) ...


2007 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 309-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong-Soon Kim ◽  
Jin-Hee Park ◽  
Sung-Suk Han

This longitudinal study examined how nursing students' moral judgment changes after they become qualified nurses working in a hospital environment. The sample used was a group of 80 nursing students attending a university in Suwon, Korea, between 2001 and 2003. By using a Korean version of the Judgment About Nursing Decisions questionnaire, an instrument used in nursing care research, moral judgment scores based on Ketefian's six nursing dilemmas were determined. The results were as follows: (1) the qualified nurses had significantly higher idealistic moral judgment scores than the nursing students; (2) the qualified nurses showed significantly higher realistic moral judgment scores than the nursing students; and (3) when comparing idealistic and realistic moral judgment scores, both the qualified nurses and the nursing students had higher scores for idealistic moral judgment. Further study is recommended to examine changes in moral judgment.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (21) ◽  
pp. 1-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanne D Fisher ◽  
Karoline Freeman ◽  
Aileen Clarke ◽  
Peter Spurgeon ◽  
Mike Smyth ◽  
...  

BackgroundThe role of ambulance services has changed dramatically over the last few decades with the introduction of paramedics able to provide life-saving interventions, thanks to sophisticated equipment and treatments available. The number of 999 calls continues to increase, with adverse events theoretically possible with each one. Most patient safety research is based on hospital data, but little is known concerning patient safety when using ambulance services, when things can be very different. There is an urgent need to characterise the evidence base for patient safety in NHS ambulance services.ObjectiveTo identify and map available evidence relating to patient safety when using ambulance services.DesignMixed-methods design including systematic review and review of ambulance service documentation, with areas for future research prioritised using a Delphi process.Setting and participantsAmbulance services, their staff and service users in UK.Data sourcesA wide range of data sources were explored. Multiple databases, reference lists from key papers and citations, Google and the NHS Confederation website were searched, and experts contacted to ensure that new data were included in the review. The databases MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Web of Science, Science Direct, Emerald, Education Resources Information Center (ERIC), Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, Social Services Abstracts, Sociological Abstracts, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS), PsycINFO, PsycARTICLES, Health Management Information Consortium (HMIC), NHS Evidence, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE), NHS Economic Evaluation Database (NHS EED),Health Technology Assessment, the FADE library, Current Awareness Service for Health (CASH), OpenDOAR (Directory of Open Access Repositories) and Open System for Information on Grey Literature in Europe (OpenSIGLE) and Zetoc (The British Library's Electronic Table of Contents) were searched from 1 January 1980 to 12 October 2011. Publicly available documents and issues identified by National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA), NHS Litigation Authority (NHSLA) and coroners’ reports were considered. Opinions and perceptions of senior managers, ambulance staff and service users were solicited.Review methodsData were extracted from annual reports using two-stage thematic analysis, data from quality accounts were collated with safety priorities tabulated and considered using thematic analysis, NPSA incident report data were collated and displayed comparatively using descriptive statistics, claims reported to NHSLA were analysed to identify number and cost of claims from mistakes and/or poor service, and summaries of coroners’ reports were assessed using thematic analysis to identify underlying safety issues. The depth of analysis is limited by the remit of a scoping exercise and availability of data.ResultsWe identified studies exploring different aspects of safety, which were of variable quality and with little evidence to support activities currently undertaken by ambulance services. Adequately powered studies are required to address issues of patient safety in this service, and it appeared that national priorities were what determined safety activities, rather than patient need. There was inconsistency of information on attitudes and approaches to patient safety, exacerbated by a lack of common terminology.ConclusionPatient safety needs to become a more prominent consideration for ambulance services, rather than operational pressures, including targets and driving the service. Development of new models of working must include adequate training and monitoring of clinical risks. Providers and commissioners need a full understanding of the safety implications of introducing new models of care, particularly to a mobile workforce often isolated from colleagues, which requires a body of supportive evidence and an inherent critical evaluation culture. It is difficult to extrapolate findings of clinical studies undertaken in secondary care to ambulance service practice and current national guidelines often rely on consensus opinion regarding applicability to the pre-hospital environment. Areas requiring further work include the safety surrounding discharging patients, patient accidents, equipment and treatment, delays in transfer/admission to hospital, and treatment and diagnosis, with a clear need for increased reliability and training for improving handover to hospital.FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.


Rev Rene ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
pp. e62502
Author(s):  
Nadia Raquel Suzini Camillo ◽  
Laura Misue Matsuda ◽  
Edilaine Maran ◽  
Jéssica dos Santos Pini ◽  
Hellen Emília Peruzzo Aveiro ◽  
...  

Objective: to apprehend patients’ perception of spirituality, religiosity, and the practice of euphemia throughout hospitalization. Methods: qualitative research, conducted with 12 hospitalized patients. Data collection took place through individual interviews. The speeches were transcribed in full, submitted to thematic content analysis, and the discussion was based on the Transpersonal Care theory. Results: from the speeches, three categories emerged: Spirituality and religiosity: meaning and balm to human life; Benefits of the practice of euphemia in the hospital environment; Spirituality, religiosity, and euphemia in the art of nursing care: biopsychosocial triad in the patient’s perception. Conclusion: spirituality, religiosity, and euphemia were configured as a biopsychosocial triad capable of attributing meaning, foundation, and balm to human life. Also, it may encourage patients and nursing professionals to face the adversities of the hospital environment.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (17) ◽  
pp. 3736 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tittaya Mairittha ◽  
Nattaya Mairittha ◽  
Sozo Inoue

Integrating speech recondition technology into an electronic health record (EHR) has been studied in recent years. However, the full adoption of the system still faces challenges such as handling speech errors, transforming raw data into an understandable format and controlling the transition from one field to the next field with speech commands. To reduce errors, cost, and documentation time, we propose a dialogue system care record (DSCR) based on a smartphone for nursing documentation. We describe the effects of DSCR on (1) documentation speed, (2) document accuracy and (3) user satisfaction. We tested the application with 12 participants to examine the usability and feasibility of DSCR. The evaluation shows that DSCR can collect data efficiently by achieving 96% of documentation accuracy. Average documentation speed was increased by 15% (P = 0.012) compared to traditional electronic forms (e-forms). The participants’ average satisfaction rating was 4.8 using DSCR compared to 3.6 using e-forms on a scale of 1–5 (P = 0.032).


2015 ◽  
Vol IV Série (7) ◽  
pp. 21-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carla Fernandes ◽  
José Gomes ◽  
Maria Martins ◽  
Barbara Gomes ◽  
Lucia Gonçalves

Author(s):  
Mariela Su

Los cuidados de Enfermería constituyen un elemento fundamental y articulador en la atención integral que se brinda en el medio hospitalario. Esto se evidencia en los documentos que registran la atención al paciente; en este sentido, las notas de Enfermería son una importante fuente de información que permiten dar continuidad al cuidado. En este trabajo, se realiza una revisión bibliográfica de aspectos que deben tenerse en cuenta para la realización de las notas de Enfermería. Más en concreto, se trata de conceptos deontológicos de la profesión y de aspectos legales que deben tenerse en cuenta para la construcción de la historia clínica. El insumo final para el análisis fue integrado por 50 artículos científicos de revisión, reflexión e investigación incluidos en las bases de datos SCIELO, OVID, DIALNET y PUBMED, así como documentos emanados de la legislación colombiana. En la estrategia de búsqueda, se utilizaron las palabras clave: enfermería, registros de enfermería, atención de enfermería y servicios de enfermería. En conclusión, quedó claro que las notas de Enfermería forman parte esencial de los expedientes de cualquier institución hospitalaria; en ellas se registran las intervenciones que realiza Enfermería en su labor asistencial. Por tanto, es necesario contar con documentos legales que avalen el rol autónomo de la profesión para así facilitar la investigación clínica, docente y cumplir con los requerimientos fundamentales para defender eficazmente litigios y retos legales.ABSTRACTA fundamental key element and articulator in the comprehensive care that is provided by the hospital environment is the nursing care. The documents that record the patient care are evident, in this sense, this is evident in the documents that record the patient care; in this sense, the nursing notes are an important source of information that allows you to give continuity to the care. In this work paper, a bibliographical review about aspects that must be taken into account for doing nursing notes is done. It’s about concepts of ethic of the profession and legal aspects which must be taken into account in order to report the clinical history, more specifically, final input for the analysis of 50 scientific articles in order to review was composed, reflection and research included in the SCIELO, OVID, DIALNET and PUBMED databases, and documents issued by Colombian legislation. The search strategy the key words: nurse, nursing, nursing care and nursing services records were used. In conclusion, it is clear that nurses notes are an essential part of any hospital; there nursing care interventions made by nursing care work are recorded. So, to have legal documents demonstrating the role of the autonomous profession to facilitate clinical research, is necessary, teaching and comply with the fundamental requirements for effectively defending litigation and legal challenges


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