Lars-Olov Lundqvist1, Dilfera Hermiati2, Titin Sutini2, Agneta Schröder3. 1. University Health Care Research Center, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University, Örebro, Sweden. Electronic address: lars-olov.lundqvist@regionorebrolan.se. 2. Faculty of Nursing, Padjajaran University, Jatinangor, Indonesia. 3. University Health Care Research Center, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University, Örebro, Sweden; Department of Health Science, Faculty of Health, Care and Nursing, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Gjövik, Norway.
Abstract
AIM: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the psychometric properties and factor structure of the Indonesian version of the Quality of Psychiatric Care - Inpatient Staff (QPC-IPS) instrument. METHODS: A sample of 192 permanently employed members of staff at two general psychiatric wards in Indonesia completed the QPC-IPS, which consists of 30 items covering six dimensions of quality. RESULTS: Confirmatory factor analysis revealed that the factor structure of the Indonesian version was equivalent to that proposed from the original Swedish QPC-IPS. Internal consistency for the full QPC-IPS was adequate, but poor for some of the factors. The results thus demonstrate that the concept of quality of care expressed in the QPC-IPS is to a large extent equivalent among staff in fundamentally different health care systems and cultural contexts. CONCLUSION: The Indonesian QPC-IPS is a useful instrument for evaluating staff perception of psychiatric inpatient care in Indonesia, and thus contributes to health care improvement in the field of psychiatry. The QPC-IPS can be used together with the Quality of Psychiatric Care- In-Patient (QPC-IP) instrument, which is completed by the inpatients themselves, to improve the quality of psychiatric inpatient care and national as well as international benchmarking.
AIM: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the psychometric properties and factor structure of the Indonesian version of the Quality of Psychiatric Care - Inpatient Staff (QPC-IPS) instrument. METHODS: A sample of 192 permanently employed members of staff at two general psychiatric wards in Indonesia completed the QPC-IPS, which consists of 30 items covering six dimensions of quality. RESULTS: Confirmatory factor analysis revealed that the factor structure of the Indonesian version was equivalent to that proposed from the original Swedish QPC-IPS. Internal consistency for the full QPC-IPS was adequate, but poor for some of the factors. The results thus demonstrate that the concept of quality of care expressed in the QPC-IPS is to a large extent equivalent among staff in fundamentally different health care systems and cultural contexts. CONCLUSION: The Indonesian QPC-IPS is a useful instrument for evaluating staff perception of psychiatric inpatient care in Indonesia, and thus contributes to health care improvement in the field of psychiatry. The QPC-IPS can be used together with the Quality of Psychiatric Care- In-Patient (QPC-IP) instrument, which is completed by the inpatients themselves, to improve the quality of psychiatric inpatient care and national as well as international benchmarking.
Authors: Sara Sanchez-Balcells; Maria-Teresa Lluch-Canut; Marta Domínguez Del Campo; A R Moreno-Poyato; M Tomás-Jiménez; Lars-Olov Lundqvist; Agneta Schröder; Montserrat Puig-Llobet; J F Roldan-Merino Journal: BMC Nurs Date: 2021-10-08
Authors: Manuel Tomás-Jiménez; Juan Roldán-Merino; Sara Sanchez-Balcells; Agneta Schröder; Lars-Olov Lundqvist; Montserrat Puig-Llobet; Antonio R Moreno-Poyato; Marta Domínguez Del Campo; Maria Teresa Lluch-Canut Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2022-03-07 Impact factor: 4.379