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Nursing quality indicators for adult intensive care : A consensus study
Author(s) -
Evangelou Efi,
Middleton Nicos,
Kyprianou Theodoros,
Kouta Christiana,
Merkouris Anastasios,
Raftopoulos Vasilios,
Palazis Lakis,
Lambrinou Ekaterini
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nursing in critical care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.689
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1478-5153
pISSN - 1362-1017
DOI - 10.1111/nicc.12543
Subject(s) - likert scale , intensive care unit , medicine , nursing , intensive care , quality (philosophy) , patient safety , accidental , health care , intensive care medicine , psychology , developmental psychology , philosophy , physics , epistemology , acoustics , economics , economic growth
Background The selection of quality indicators demonstrating the efficiency and relevance of nursing practice in patient outcomes in the intensive care unit remains a challenge. Aim The aim of this study was to develop a set of potential quality indicators to quantify nursing care provided to critically ill patients through a consensus method. Design This was a three‐phase study including a European survey of intensive care unit (ICU) nurses (phase one) followed by a two‐phase face‐to‐face consensus meeting of experts from Cyprus. Method Two distinct panels of experts were asked to rate each quality indicator using a 4‐point Likert scale in phases one and two. The level of consensus was set at 60%. In phase three, scores of the content validity index for items and scales were considered for the final selection of quality indicators. Results The phase one survey included 139 ICU nurses from 13 European countries, and phases two and three included seven ICU experts from Cyprus. “Consensus in” was achieved for 12 items at the end of phase two. Three of the quality indicators were significantly different by country: (a) falls ( P  = .006), (b) accidental removal of nasogastric tube ( P  < .001), and (c) accidental removal of intravascular catheters ( P  < .001). Only falls was significantly correlated with higher academic qualifications of the participants ( P  = .002). Conclusions Fifteen items have been identified as potential indicators for adult ICU nursing quality. These need to be prospectively studied to determine the extent to which they can accurately capture nursing care quality in this setting. Relevance to clinical practice The study provides a set of relevant quality indicators. A nursing set for the ICU may serve as the basis for nursing management and facilitate the strategy dedicated to the vision of health care quality assurance.

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