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      The Effect of Routine Rounding by Nursing Staff on Patient Satisfaction on a Cardiac Telemetry Unit :

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          Patient satisfaction with nursing care in the context of health care: a literature study.

          To evaluate and improve the quality of care provided, it is of vital importance to investigate the quality of care in the context of health care. Patient satisfaction is a significant indicator of the quality of care. Consequently, quality work includes investigations that map out patient satisfaction with nursing care. To improve the quality of nursing care, the nurse needs to know what factors influence patient satisfaction. The aim of this literature study was to describe the influences on patient satisfaction with regard to nursing care in the context of health care. In the description of nursing care, we have used Henderson's nursing care model. The results describe eight domains that have an influence on patient satisfaction with nursing care: the socio-demographic background of the patients, patients' expectations regarding nursing care, the physical environment, communication and information, participation and involvement, interpersonal relations between nurse and patient, nurses' medical-technical competence, and the influence of the health care organization on both patients and nurses. The bulk of the literature included in the study came from the UK, Sweden and the USA. This means that the results should be applicable to health care in the western world. An important implication for future research is to continue to elucidate the factors that influence satisfaction with nursing care, as seen from the patient's perspective.
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            Effects of Nursing Rounds

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              Measuring patient satisfaction with nursing care: experience of using the Newcastle Satisfaction with Nursing Scale.

              Patient satisfaction with care has frequently been used as a measurement of quality, especially in attempts to demonstrate the benefits of changes in nursing practice. Unfortunately such attempts have frequently failed as patient satisfaction ratings have lacked sensitivity, consistently achieving very high scores. They have also failed to isolate the nursing component from the whole health care experience. The Newcastle Satisfaction with Nursing Scale (NSNS) has been developed after extensive research work as an attempt to establish reliable and valid measures of patients' experiences of and satisfaction with nursing care. This study evaluated the use of the NSNS in practice and found that it was readily understood by patients and easily administered by clinical staff. However, several lessons were learnt which could help its administration. The results demonstrated a very high degree of satisfaction with nursing care which left the discriminatory ability of the scale open to question, although its potential benefits in standard setting were demonstrated. Further evaluative studies are needed if the potential benefits of the NSNS are to be fully realised.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Health Care Manager
                The Health Care Manager
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                1525-5794
                2008
                October 2008
                : 27
                : 4
                : 332-337
                Article
                10.1097/HCM.0b013e31819179a1
                1fbf38c1-597c-4369-93ec-ad543ffe3ecc
                © 2008
                History

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