| Literature DB >> 15264264 |
June H Larrabee1, C Lynne Ostrow, Mary Lynne Withrow, Michelle A Janney, Gerald R Hobbs, Christopher Burant.
Abstract
The purpose of this predictive nonexperimental study was to investigate the influence of registered nurse (RN) job satisfaction, context of care, structure of care, patient-perceived nurse caring, and patient characteristics on patient satisfaction with inpatient hospital nursing care in an academic medical center in north-central West Virginia. Convenience samples of patients (N = 362) and RNs (N = 90) were recruited from two medical units, two surgical units, and three intensive care step-down units. Causal modeling identified patient-perceived nurse caring as the major predictor of patient satisfaction, with nurse/physician (RN/MD) collaboration as the only other direct predictor. Age had an indirect influence on patient satisfaction. Strategies to achieve and maintain patient satisfaction should address the enhancement of patient-perceived nurse caring and RN/MD collaboration.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15264264 DOI: 10.1002/nur.20021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Nurs Health ISSN: 0160-6891 Impact factor: 2.228