Lake Eileen T, Smith Jessica G, Staiger Douglas O, Hatfield Linda A, Cramer Emily, Kalisch Beatrice J, Rogowski Jeannette A
Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research, School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
College of Nursing and Health Innovation, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX, United States.
Front Pediatr. 2020 Mar 18;8:74. doi: 10.3389/fped.2020.00074. eCollection 2020.
The satisfaction of parents of infants in neonatal intensive care is important to parent-infant bonding and parents' ability to care for their baby, including after discharge. Given the principal caregiver role of nurses in this setting, parent satisfaction is influenced by high quality nursing care. Nursing care that is required but missed, such as counseling and support, might influence parent satisfaction. How missed nursing care relates to parent satisfaction is unknown. To describe the satisfaction of parents of infants in neonatal intensive care and to determine how satisfaction relates to missed nursing care in a sample of USA nursing units. The design was cross-sectional and correlational. Thirty neonatal intensive care units that participate in the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators were recruited. To maximize sample variation in missed care, the highest and lowest quartile hospitals on missed nursing care, measured by nurse survey, were eligible. Ten parents of infants who were to be discharged were recruited from each site to complete a survey. Parent satisfaction was measured by the EMPATHIC-38 instrument, comprising five subscales: information, care and treatment, organization, parental participation, and professional attitude, and a total satisfaction score. Multivariate regression models were estimated. Parent satisfaction was high (5.70 out of 6.00). The prevalence of missed care was 25 and 51% for low and high missed care units, respectively, and 40% for all units. On average, nurses missed 1.06 care activities; in the low and high missed care units the averages were 0.46 and 1.32. Over 10% of nurses missed activities that involved the parent, e.g., teaching, helping breastfeeding mothers, and preparing families for discharge. One standard deviation decrease in missed care activities at the unit level was associated with a 0.08-point increase in parent satisfaction with care and treatment ( = 0.01). Parents in USA neonatal intensive care units are highly satisfied. Neonatal intensive care nurses routinely miss care. Parent satisfaction with care and treatment is related to missed nursing care. Nursing care that is missed relates primarily to the care of the baby by the parents, which could have long term health and developmental consequences.
新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)中婴儿父母的满意度对于亲子关系的建立以及父母照顾婴儿的能力(包括出院后)非常重要。鉴于护士在这种环境中的主要照顾者角色,父母的满意度受到高质量护理的影响。所需但缺失的护理,如咨询和支持,可能会影响父母的满意度。缺失的护理与父母满意度之间的关系尚不清楚。本研究旨在描述美国护理单位样本中新生儿重症监护病房婴儿父母的满意度,并确定满意度与缺失护理之间的关系。研究设计为横断面相关性研究。招募了30个参与国家护理质量指标数据库的新生儿重症监护病房。为了使缺失护理的样本差异最大化,通过护士调查测量,在缺失护理方面处于最高和最低四分位数的医院符合条件。从每个地点招募10名即将出院婴儿的父母来完成一项调查。父母满意度通过EMPATHIC - 38工具进行测量,该工具包括五个子量表:信息、护理与治疗、组织、父母参与和专业态度,以及一个总体满意度得分。估计了多元回归模型。父母满意度较高(满分6.00分,得分为5.70分)。低缺失护理单位和高缺失护理单位的缺失护理发生率分别为25%和51%,所有单位的平均发生率为40%。平均而言,护士错过1.06项护理活动;在低缺失护理单位和高缺失护理单位,平均值分别为0.46和1.32。超过10%的护士错过涉及父母的活动,例如教学、帮助母乳喂养母亲以及为家庭出院做准备。单位层面缺失护理活动每减少一个标准差,父母对护理与治疗的满意度就会增加0.08分(P = 0.01)。美国新生儿重症监护病房的父母满意度很高。新生儿重症监护护士经常错过护理。父母对护理与治疗的满意度与缺失护理有关。缺失的护理主要与父母对婴儿的照顾有关,这可能会对婴儿的长期健康和发育产生影响。