Abstract
Background: Nursing roles in general practice have undergone significant expansion, but as yet there are few tools to measure the quality of nursing care in general practice. This study piloted the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS) to evaluate two aspects of quality of care in this setting. Methods: Participants were patients attending nurse-led general and chronic-disease clinics in two general practices The survey was posted to 180 consecutive patients attending these clinics over one week (response rate, 28% for general clinic, 40% chronic diseases clinic; n=. 57). Scores were calculated for enablement and satisfaction and free text comments were analysed. Comparisons were made between patients who had attended the general clinic for influenza vaccination and for other conditions, and those who attended the chronic diseases clinic. Findings: Overall results indicate high levels of satisfaction (. M=. 68.3/75 SD. =. 8.1) and moderate enablement (. M=. 4.7/8 SD. =. 3.2). Significant differences were observed between satisfaction scores for patients attending the chronic disease clinic and the general clinic for influenza vaccinations alone, and between those attending the general clinic for influenza vaccinations versus treatment of other conditions. Patients attending the chronic disease clinic had higher enablement scores than patients receiving influenza vaccinations at the general clinic. Analysis of free-text comments in the survey supported these findings. Conclusion: All patients reported satisfaction with nursing care. Patients receiving chronic disease management reported high levels of enablement. This pilot indicated that the PESS can distinguish between two aspects of the quality of nursing care that may impact on patient outcomes.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 207-214 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Collegian |
Volume | 22 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jun 2015 |
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Desborough, J., Phillips, C., Banfield, M., Bagheri, N., & Mills, J. (2015). Impact of nursing care in Australian general practice on the quality of care: A pilot of the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS). Collegian, 22(2), 207-214. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.colegn.2014.10.003
Desborough, Jane ; Phillips, Christine ; Banfield, Michelle et al. / Impact of nursing care in Australian general practice on the quality of care : A pilot of the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS). In: Collegian. 2015 ; Vol. 22, No. 2. pp. 207-214.
@article{56597b31277a4eec84cbbdd52d2e0359,
title = "Impact of nursing care in Australian general practice on the quality of care: A pilot of the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS)",
abstract = "Background: Nursing roles in general practice have undergone significant expansion, but as yet there are few tools to measure the quality of nursing care in general practice. This study piloted the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS) to evaluate two aspects of quality of care in this setting. Methods: Participants were patients attending nurse-led general and chronic-disease clinics in two general practices The survey was posted to 180 consecutive patients attending these clinics over one week (response rate, 28% for general clinic, 40% chronic diseases clinic; n=. 57). Scores were calculated for enablement and satisfaction and free text comments were analysed. Comparisons were made between patients who had attended the general clinic for influenza vaccination and for other conditions, and those who attended the chronic diseases clinic. Findings: Overall results indicate high levels of satisfaction (. M=. 68.3/75 SD. =. 8.1) and moderate enablement (. M=. 4.7/8 SD. =. 3.2). Significant differences were observed between satisfaction scores for patients attending the chronic disease clinic and the general clinic for influenza vaccinations alone, and between those attending the general clinic for influenza vaccinations versus treatment of other conditions. Patients attending the chronic disease clinic had higher enablement scores than patients receiving influenza vaccinations at the general clinic. Analysis of free-text comments in the survey supported these findings. Conclusion: All patients reported satisfaction with nursing care. Patients receiving chronic disease management reported high levels of enablement. This pilot indicated that the PESS can distinguish between two aspects of the quality of nursing care that may impact on patient outcomes.",
keywords = "General practice, Patient enablement, Patient satisfaction, Practice nurses",
author = "Jane Desborough and Christine Phillips and Michelle Banfield and Nasser Bagheri and Jane Mills",
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year = "2015",
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language = "English",
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Desborough, J, Phillips, C, Banfield, M, Bagheri, N & Mills, J 2015, 'Impact of nursing care in Australian general practice on the quality of care: A pilot of the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS)', Collegian, vol. 22, no. 2, pp. 207-214. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.colegn.2014.10.003
Impact of nursing care in Australian general practice on the quality of care: A pilot of the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS). / Desborough, Jane; Phillips, Christine; Banfield, Michelle et al.
In: Collegian, Vol. 22, No. 2, 01.06.2015, p. 207-214.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of nursing care in Australian general practice on the quality of care
T2 - A pilot of the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS)
AU - Desborough, Jane
AU - Phillips, Christine
AU - Banfield, Michelle
AU - Bagheri, Nasser
AU - Mills, Jane
N1 - Publisher Copyright:© 2014 Australian College of Nursing Ltd..
PY - 2015/6/1
Y1 - 2015/6/1
N2 - Background: Nursing roles in general practice have undergone significant expansion, but as yet there are few tools to measure the quality of nursing care in general practice. This study piloted the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS) to evaluate two aspects of quality of care in this setting. Methods: Participants were patients attending nurse-led general and chronic-disease clinics in two general practices The survey was posted to 180 consecutive patients attending these clinics over one week (response rate, 28% for general clinic, 40% chronic diseases clinic; n=. 57). Scores were calculated for enablement and satisfaction and free text comments were analysed. Comparisons were made between patients who had attended the general clinic for influenza vaccination and for other conditions, and those who attended the chronic diseases clinic. Findings: Overall results indicate high levels of satisfaction (. M=. 68.3/75 SD. =. 8.1) and moderate enablement (. M=. 4.7/8 SD. =. 3.2). Significant differences were observed between satisfaction scores for patients attending the chronic disease clinic and the general clinic for influenza vaccinations alone, and between those attending the general clinic for influenza vaccinations versus treatment of other conditions. Patients attending the chronic disease clinic had higher enablement scores than patients receiving influenza vaccinations at the general clinic. Analysis of free-text comments in the survey supported these findings. Conclusion: All patients reported satisfaction with nursing care. Patients receiving chronic disease management reported high levels of enablement. This pilot indicated that the PESS can distinguish between two aspects of the quality of nursing care that may impact on patient outcomes.
AB - Background: Nursing roles in general practice have undergone significant expansion, but as yet there are few tools to measure the quality of nursing care in general practice. This study piloted the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS) to evaluate two aspects of quality of care in this setting. Methods: Participants were patients attending nurse-led general and chronic-disease clinics in two general practices The survey was posted to 180 consecutive patients attending these clinics over one week (response rate, 28% for general clinic, 40% chronic diseases clinic; n=. 57). Scores were calculated for enablement and satisfaction and free text comments were analysed. Comparisons were made between patients who had attended the general clinic for influenza vaccination and for other conditions, and those who attended the chronic diseases clinic. Findings: Overall results indicate high levels of satisfaction (. M=. 68.3/75 SD. =. 8.1) and moderate enablement (. M=. 4.7/8 SD. =. 3.2). Significant differences were observed between satisfaction scores for patients attending the chronic disease clinic and the general clinic for influenza vaccinations alone, and between those attending the general clinic for influenza vaccinations versus treatment of other conditions. Patients attending the chronic disease clinic had higher enablement scores than patients receiving influenza vaccinations at the general clinic. Analysis of free-text comments in the survey supported these findings. Conclusion: All patients reported satisfaction with nursing care. Patients receiving chronic disease management reported high levels of enablement. This pilot indicated that the PESS can distinguish between two aspects of the quality of nursing care that may impact on patient outcomes.
KW - General practice
KW - Patient enablement
KW - Patient satisfaction
KW - Practice nurses
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U2 - 10.1016/j.colegn.2014.10.003
DO - 10.1016/j.colegn.2014.10.003
M3 - Article
SN - 1322-7696
VL - 22
SP - 207
EP - 214
JO - Collegian
JF - Collegian
IS - 2
ER -
Desborough J, Phillips C, Banfield M, Bagheri N, Mills J. Impact of nursing care in Australian general practice on the quality of care: A pilot of the Patient Enablement and Satisfaction Survey (PESS). Collegian. 2015 Jun 1;22(2):207-214. doi: 10.1016/j.colegn.2014.10.003