
A Sociodemographic Characteristics on Family Satisfaction with Care in Adult Critical Care Public Hospital Terengganu, Malaysia
Author(s) -
Wan Nor Aliza Wan Abdul Rahman,
Abdul Karim Othman,
Yuzana Mohd Yusop,
Hasnah Zani,
Rohimah Ismail,
Zainab Mohd Shafie
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of management theory and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2716-7089
DOI - 10.37231/jmtp.2021.2.4.121
Subject(s) - malay , marital status , nonprobability sampling , public hospital , psychology , intensive care unit , medicine , health care , family medicine , nursing , psychiatry , population , environmental health , philosophy , linguistics , economics , economic growth
Background family satisfaction care and decision making as important indicator to evaluate the quality of care in intensive care unit. The family satisfaction in the ICU questionnaire (FS-ICU 33 Malay languages) is a well-established tool to assess satisfaction in such settings. ICU admission has many implications, for example, the effects on critically ill patients, the ICU setting, the role of health care staff and family members, communication, psychology of families and physical health. Thus, this study we tested the hypothesis that examined effects of gender, age, relationship, marital status, education level, race and occupation can attribute on family satisfaction care and decision making. Two hundred and eight respondents selected from the Public Hospital Terengganu completed the Family satisfaction ICU Malay languages questionnaire (FS-ICU-M). A quantitative, cross-sectional study and purposive sampling was conducted from 10 October 2018 to January 2020. In this study conclude that the ICU-Care satisfaction score was significantly associated with age, education level, occupation, and the relationship of the respondents (p<0.05), but not associated with the gender, race, and marital status of the respondents. Moreover, the ICU-DM satisfaction score was significantly associated with age, marital status, occupation, and the relationship of the respondents (p<0.05), but not associated with the gender, race, and education level of the respondents.