| Literature DB >> 29326193 |
Linda H Aiken1, Douglas M Sloane1, Jane Ball2, Luk Bruyneel3, Anne Marie Rafferty4, Peter Griffiths2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To inform healthcare workforce policy decisions by showing how patient perceptions of hospital care are associated with confidence in nurses and doctors, nurse staffing levels and hospital work environments.Entities:
Keywords: england; hospitals; nurses; patient satisfaction; quality of health care
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29326193 PMCID: PMC5781188 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-019189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Patient reports about nurses and doctors, and the per cent indicating their care was ‘excellent’, based on their reports about doctors and nurses
| Patient survey question | Per cent of patients in each response category | Per cent of patients in each response category indicating that their care was ‘excellent’ | |
| Did you have confidence and trust in the doctors treating you? | Yes, always | 80.4 | 52.6 |
| Yes, sometimes | 16.4 | 9.4 | |
| No | 3.1 | 3.4 | |
| Total | 100.0 | ||
| Did you have confidence and trust in the nurses treating you? | Yes, always | 75.1 | 55.3 |
| Yes, sometimes | 21.7 | 10.5 | |
| No | 3.2 | 2.8 | |
| Total | 100.0 | ||
| Were there enough nurses on duty to care for you in the hospital? | Always or nearly always | 60.4 | 57.3 |
| Sometimes | 29.5 | 26.7 | |
| Never or rarely | 10.1 | 14.1 | |
| Total | 100.0 |
The numbers reported exclude a small number (<2%) of missing responses.
Source: Data are from the 2010 National Health Service Survey of Inpatients, which involved 66 348patients discharged from 161 trusts in England.
Figure 1Per cent of patients rating their care ’excellent', by confidence and trust in nurses and doctors. Source: Data are from the 2010 National Health Service Survey of Inpatients, which involved 66 348 patients discharged from 161 trusts in England.
Figure 2Per cent of nurses reporting that different types of care were missed on their last shift. Source: Data are from the 2010 RN4CAST-England study, which surveyed 2963 inpatient medical and surgical direct care professional nurses (RNs) in a representative sample of 31 National Health Service trusts comprising 46 different hospitals.
Regression coefficients indicating the effects of staffing and practice environment on average number of types of care missed
| Effect on missed care of | Regression coefficients (95% CI) | |
| Unadjusted | Adjusted | |
| Patient-to-nurse ratio | 0.11*** | 0.15*** |
| (0.06 to 0.16) | (0.10 to 0.19) | |
| Practice environment | −0.30* | −0.26* |
| (−0.55 to 0.05) | (−0.48 to –0.04) | |
Adjusted coefficients and CIs are from regression models which control for hospital characteristics (beds >750, high technology and location) and nurse characteristics (nurse role, full-time status, years of experience and unit type). Practice environment is measured by the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index tertile.
Source: Data are from the 2010 RN4CAST-England study, which surveyed 2963 inpatient medical and surgical direct care professional nurses (RNs) in a representative sample of 31 National Health Service trusts comprising 46 different hospitals.
*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001.
ORs indicating the effect of the trust median number of types of care missed on various patient outcomes
| Effect of the median number of types of care missed on patient outcomes | ORs | |
| Unadjusted | Adjusted | |
| Rate care excellent | 0.79*** | 0.78*** |
| (0.69 to 0.90) | (0.68 to 0.90) | |
| Did not want to complain about care | 0.92 | 0.92 |
| (0.76 to 1.12) | (0.77 to 1.11) | |
| Always felt treated with respect and dignity | 0.89 | 0.92 |
| (0.78 to 1.02) | (0.81 to 1.06) | |
| Completely explained purpose of medicines | 0.87* | 0.86** |
| (0.78 to 0.98) | (0.77 to 0.95) | |
| Doctors and nurses work together excellent | 0.84** | 0.82** |
| (0.74 to 0.94) | (0.72 to 0.93) | |
| Always got answers I could understand | 0.84** | 0.83*** |
| (0.75 to 0.95) | (0.76 to 0.91) | |
| Always have confidence and trust in nurses | 0.86* | 0.85* |
| (0.74 to 0.99) | (0.73 to 0.99) | |
| Always or nearly always enough nurses | 0.87* | 0.85** |
| (0.76 to 0.99) | (0.75 to 0.96) | |
Adjusted models control for hospital characteristics (beds >750, high technology and location) and patient characteristics that might affect responses, including gender, age, length of stay, ward, number of long-standing conditions and type of admission (emergent/urgent or planned).
Source: Data are from a merged file that included information from 31 NHS trusts for which both patient information (from 5311 general medical and surgical patients included in the 2010 NHS Survey of Inpatients) and nurse information (from 2963 medical and surgical nurses surveyed in the 2010 RN4CAST-England study) were available.
NHS, National Health Service.
*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001.