Parental satisfaction with the quality of care in a South African paediatric intensive care unit

Background. The quality of family-centred care in the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) has been poorly studied in South Africa (SA). Objective. To explore parents’ satisfaction with care in a PICU in SA. Methods. A prospective descriptive survey study was conducted among a convenience sampl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: C Mol, A C Argent, B Morrow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Health and Medical Publishing Group 2018-11-01
Series:Southern African Journal of Critical Care
Online Access:http://www.sajcc.org.za/index.php/sajcc/article/download/364/307
id doaj-bf6e28dfd0c941c1bb02e518e2a7989e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bf6e28dfd0c941c1bb02e518e2a7989e2020-11-24T21:52:45ZengHealth and Medical Publishing GroupSouthern African Journal of Critical Care1562-82642078-676X2018-11-01342515810.7196/SAJCC.2018.v34i2.366Parental satisfaction with the quality of care in a South African paediatric intensive care unitC MolA C ArgentB MorrowBackground. The quality of family-centred care in the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) has been poorly studied in South Africa (SA). Objective. To explore parents’ satisfaction with care in a PICU in SA. Methods. A prospective descriptive survey study was conducted among a convenience sample of 100 parents of children admitted to the PICU for ≥48 hours. Participants completed the EMpowerment of PArents in THe Intensive Care (EMPATHIC-30) questionnaire, which includes 30 closed questions rating satisfaction in different domains and four open-ended questions to qualitatively describe PICU experiences. Results. Of the 100 admissions included in the study, 35% were unplanned and 88% were mechanically ventilated. Parents were very satisfied with the quality of PICU care, with mean scores in all domains reaching ≥5.5 on a 6-point Likert scale. Parents were most satisfied with the professional attitude of PICU staff, whereas the lowest scores were seen in the ‘Information’ and ‘Parental participation’ domains. The internal consistency (Cronbach’s α) associated with the different domains ranged between 0.25 (Parental participation) and 0.59 (Care and cure). The need for communication and support during the admission period, and the importance of environmental factors, proximity to the child, the attitude of medical staff and social support during the PICU stay emerged as common themes from the responses to the open-ended questions. Conclusion. Although parents were generally well satisfied with the quality of care, improving family involvement and providing adequate information in the PICU can contribute to quality family-centred care. Keywords. Family- centered care; patient- centered care; paediatric intensive care unit; quality of carehttp://www.sajcc.org.za/index.php/sajcc/article/download/364/307
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C Mol
A C Argent
B Morrow
spellingShingle C Mol
A C Argent
B Morrow
Parental satisfaction with the quality of care in a South African paediatric intensive care unit
Southern African Journal of Critical Care
author_facet C Mol
A C Argent
B Morrow
author_sort C Mol
title Parental satisfaction with the quality of care in a South African paediatric intensive care unit
title_short Parental satisfaction with the quality of care in a South African paediatric intensive care unit
title_full Parental satisfaction with the quality of care in a South African paediatric intensive care unit
title_fullStr Parental satisfaction with the quality of care in a South African paediatric intensive care unit
title_full_unstemmed Parental satisfaction with the quality of care in a South African paediatric intensive care unit
title_sort parental satisfaction with the quality of care in a south african paediatric intensive care unit
publisher Health and Medical Publishing Group
series Southern African Journal of Critical Care
issn 1562-8264
2078-676X
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Background. The quality of family-centred care in the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) has been poorly studied in South Africa (SA). Objective. To explore parents’ satisfaction with care in a PICU in SA. Methods. A prospective descriptive survey study was conducted among a convenience sample of 100 parents of children admitted to the PICU for ≥48 hours. Participants completed the EMpowerment of PArents in THe Intensive Care (EMPATHIC-30) questionnaire, which includes 30 closed questions rating satisfaction in different domains and four open-ended questions to qualitatively describe PICU experiences. Results. Of the 100 admissions included in the study, 35% were unplanned and 88% were mechanically ventilated. Parents were very satisfied with the quality of PICU care, with mean scores in all domains reaching ≥5.5 on a 6-point Likert scale. Parents were most satisfied with the professional attitude of PICU staff, whereas the lowest scores were seen in the ‘Information’ and ‘Parental participation’ domains. The internal consistency (Cronbach’s α) associated with the different domains ranged between 0.25 (Parental participation) and 0.59 (Care and cure). The need for communication and support during the admission period, and the importance of environmental factors, proximity to the child, the attitude of medical staff and social support during the PICU stay emerged as common themes from the responses to the open-ended questions. Conclusion. Although parents were generally well satisfied with the quality of care, improving family involvement and providing adequate information in the PICU can contribute to quality family-centred care. Keywords. Family- centered care; patient- centered care; paediatric intensive care unit; quality of care
url http://www.sajcc.org.za/index.php/sajcc/article/download/364/307
work_keys_str_mv AT cmol parentalsatisfactionwiththequalityofcareinasouthafricanpaediatricintensivecareunit
AT acargent parentalsatisfactionwiththequalityofcareinasouthafricanpaediatricintensivecareunit
AT bmorrow parentalsatisfactionwiththequalityofcareinasouthafricanpaediatricintensivecareunit
_version_ 1725875224885329920