| Literature DB >> 30621682 |
Eline Ree1, Siri Wiig2, Tanja Manser2,3, Marianne Storm2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient centeredness is an important component of patient care and healthcare quality. Several scales exist to measure patient centeredness, and previous literature provides a critical appraisal of their measurement properties. However, limited knowledge exists regarding the content of the various scales in terms of what type of patient centeredness they represent and how they can be used for quality improvement. The aim of this study was to explore the measurement properties of patient centeredness scales and their content with a special focus on patient involvement, and assess whether and how they can be used for quality improvement.Entities:
Keywords: Measurement; Patient centeredness; Patient involvement; Quality improvement; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30621682 PMCID: PMC6323701 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3798-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Quality criteria and thresholds of acceptability for measurement properties (adapted from Wilberforce et al., 2016)
| Measurement property | Rating | Threshold for acceptability |
|---|---|---|
| Internal consistency: overall scale | + | Cronbach alpha >.70 and < .95 |
| – | Cronbach alpha <.70 and > .95 | |
| Internal consistency: sub-scales | + | Cronbach alpha >.70 and < .95 |
| – | Cronbach alpha <.70 and > .95 | |
| Reliability | + | Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC) > .70 OR Pearson’s Correlation Coefficient (r) > .80 |
| – | ICC < .70 OR | |
| Content validity | + | Assessed in target population that items are a complete representation of concept under measurement and that all items are relevant |
| – | Questionnaire is incomplete OR contains irrelevant items | |
| Structural validity | + | Factors explain 50% of variance |
| – | Factors explain less than 50% of variance | |
| Cross-cultural validity | + | Original factor structure confirmed OR no differential item functioning |
| – | Original factor structure not confirmed OR important differential item functioning observed |
Overview of included instruments
| Name of measure | No. of items | Subscales | Study settings | Conceptual frameworka |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Person-Centred Climate Questionnaire – Staff version (PCQ-S) | 14 | 1. A climate of safety | Hospital wards at three hospitals in northern Sweden [ | Not included. Referred to several definitions and conceptualizations in the literature without making explicit which one they used. |
| Patient-Centred Care Competency (PCCC) | 17 | 1. Respecting patients perspectives | Two teaching hospitals in Seoul, Korea | Sees patient-centered care as a global concept that includes knowing and respecting patients’ values, preferences and needs; providing for patients’ physical and emotional comfort; advocating for patients; and promoting partnership between providers and patients in care decisions. |
| Person-Centred Health Care for Older Adults Survey (PCHCOA) | 31 | Eight dimensions, not labeled | 17 health services (community rehabilitation centers, continence clinics, general medical, geriatric evaluation and management unit, other) across Victoria, Australia | Identified five principles underlying person-centered health care based on which the scale was developed: getting to know the patient, sharing power and responsibility, accessibility and flexibility, coordination and integration, and having an environment that is conductive to person-centered care |
| Person-Centered Care Assessment Tool, (P-CAT) | 13 p | 1. Extent of personalizing care mount of organizational support | Long-term aged care facilities in Australia [ | Not included. Referred to several definitions and conceptualizations in the literature without making explicit which one they used. |
| Individualized care Scale (ICS-Nurse) | 34 | 1. ICS-A-Nurse (Explores nurses’ view on how they support patient individuality through nursing activities in general) | Inpatient wards in one university, two regional and two psychiatric hospitals, and four health centers [ | Two dimensions of individualized care, as seen from nurses’ perspective, were used to develop the scale: 1) “by exploring nurses’ views about how they support their patient’s individuality through specific nursing activities”, and 2) “by examining how nurses evaluate the maintenance of individuality in the care they provide.” |
| Person-directed care (PDC) | 50 | 1. Knowing the person | Long-term care settings (residential care, assisted living and home care settings) in Oregon [ | Based on literature review and consultations with PDC experts (clinicians and providers), the authors identified six central dimensions of PDC: personhood, knowing the person, autonomy and choice, comfort care, nurturing relationship, and supportive environment. The scale development article provides thorough definitions of each dimension [ |
| Self-efficacy in patient-centeredness (SEPCQ-27) | 27 | 1. Exploring the patient perspective | Two medical schools (Aarhus University, University of Southern Denmark) and two hospitals (Aarhus and Copenhagen University hospitals) | |
| Person-Centered Practices in Assisted Living (PC-PAL) – staff version | 62 | 1. Workforce practices | Assisted Residences in North Carolina (small, medium and large communities) | Used a conceptual framework set forth by the Center for Excellence in Assisted Living (CEAL) in their Informational Guide for Person-Centered Care in AL (that person-centeredness is built on core values and philosophy, relationships and community, management/ownership/governance, leadership, workforce, services, meaningful life, environment, and accountability). |
| Individualized Care Inventory (ICI) | Short version: 22 | 1. Knowing the person/resident | Long-term care facilities in Victoria and Sidney, British Columbia (BC), Canada [ | Literature review derived the following definition of individualized care that guided development the scale: Care that reflects 1) the individuality of the resident, i.e., knowing the person/resident, 2) an opportunity for autonomy and choice for the resident, and 3) open communication between staff themselves and between staff and residents. |
| Patient-centered care (PCC) | 27 | 1. Holistic care | Acute care institutions in Ontario, Canada | Conceptualized PCC as holistic-, collaborative-, and responsive care based on an integrative review of conceptual, empirical, and clinical literature. |
| Geriatric Care Environment Scale (GCES) | 28 | 1. Aging-Sensitive Care Delivery | 71 hospitals that are a part of a national program aimed at system improvement to achieve patient-centered care for older adults (Nurses Improving Care for Health System Elders (NICHE)) in New York. | Not included |
aAll information in this column is based on the original scale development study
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart of article selection
Quality appraisal
| Scale | Study | Internal consistency | Reliability | Content validity | Structural validity | Cross-cultural validity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| subscales | total scale | ||||||
| PCHCOA | Dow et al., 2013 | – | + | NR | + | + | NA |
| PCCC | Hwang, 2015 | + | + | – | – | + | NA |
| GCES | Kim et al., 2007 | + | + | NR | + | + | NR |
| SEPCQ | Zachariae et al., 2015 | + | + | + | – | + | NA |
| PC-PAL (staff version) | Zimmerman et al., 2015 | + | + | + | – | + | NA |
| PCC | Sidani et al., 2014 | NR | NR | NR | + | – | NA |
| ICI original | Chappell et al., 2007 | – | NR | + | + | – | NA |
| ICI | O’Rourke et al., 2009 | + | NR | NR | NA | + | NR |
| PCQ-S Swedish original | Edvardsson et al., 2009 | + | + | – | + | + | NA |
| PCQ-S English | Edvardsson et al., 2010 | – | + | – | NA | + | + |
| PCQ-Norwegian | Bergland et al., 2012 | + | + | – | NA | + | + |
| PCQ-S Swedish | Edvardsson et al., 2015 | + | + | NR | NA | NR | NR |
| P-CAT English original | Edvardsson et al., 2010 | – | + | – | + | + | NA |
| P-CAT Norwegian | Rokstad et al., 2012 | + | + | + | NA | – | NR |
| P-CAT Swedish | Sjögren et al., 2012 | + | + | – | NA | – | NR |
| P-CAT Chinese | Zhong et al., 2013 | – | – | NR | NA | + | NR |
| P-CAT Spanish | Martínez et al., 2016 | NR | + | + | NA | – | – |
| PDC English original | White et al., 2008 | + | NR | NR | + | + | NA |
| PDC American | Sullivan et al., 2012 | + | NR | NR | NA | NR | NR |
| PDC Korean | Choi & Lee, 2014 | – | + | NR | NA | + | + |
| ICS-Nurse Finnish original | Suhonen et al., 2010 | + | + | + | + | + | NA |
| ICS-nurse Swedish | Berg et al., 2012 | + | NR | NR | NA | + | + |
Note: NR not reported, NA not applicable
Categorization according to Tritter’s (2009) Framework
| Scale (no items) | Type of involvementa | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual | Collective | Direct | Indirect | Reactive | Proactive | Not categorized | Preconditions | |
| PCQ – S (14) | 14 | |||||||
| PCCC (17) | 9 | 0 | 4 | 5 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 5 |
| PCHCOA (31) | 9 | 1 | 3 | 7 | 7 | 3 | 21 | |
| P-CAT (13) | 5 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 8 | |
| ICS-N (34) | 31 | 0 | 11 | 20 | 27 | 4 | 3 | |
| PDC (50) | 16 | 2 | 13 | 5 | 9 | 9 | 6 | 26 |
| SEPCQ (27) | 9 | 0 | 2 | 7 | 9 | 0 | 18 | |
| PC-PAL (62) | 10 | 4 | 8 | 6 | 9 | 5 | 14 | 34 |
| ICI (46) | 6 | 2 | 2 | 6 | 4 | 4 | 10 | 28 |
| PCC (27) | 19 | 0 | 5 | 14 | 12 | 7 | 5 | 3 |
| GCES (28) | 3 | 2 | 1 | 4 | 5 | 0 | 6 | 17 |
aitems are categorized according to the following dimensions: individual vs. collective, direct vs. indirect, and reactive vs. proactive