1.A Comparative Study of how Subjects' Characteristics and Nursing Service Quality Influence on Hospital Revisiting Intent between Patients and Nurses.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2005;35(7):1210-1220
PURPOSE: This study was aimed to examine how subjects' characteristics and nursing service quality influence hospital revisiting intent, to compare perceptions of patients with those of nurses. METHOD: The questionnaire was developed and distributed to 300 patients and nurses at six general hospitals in a provincial city, Korea. For data analysis, the SPSS/PC program was used. RESULT: The nursing service quality's scores of patients is 3.61, that of nurses is 3.77, and there is a significant difference. The hospital revisiting intent's score of patients is 4.84, that of nurses is 4.61, and there are no significant differences. In subjects' characteristics, patients perceive that the hospital is the only different factor, and place hospital revisiting intent at 3.6%. Nurses perceive that education level and position are different factors, and place hospital revisiting intent at 3.3%. In nursing service quality, patients perceive that 2 attributes explain hospital revisiting intent at 17.8% and 2 factors explain it at 16.5%; whereas, nurses perceive that 2 attributes explain hospital revisiting intent at 15.3% and 3 factors explain it at 12.2%. CONCLUSION: There are perception gaps between consumers and providers. So nursing and hospital managers must recognize these facts and provide various marketing strategies to overcome them.
Questionnaires
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Patient Satisfaction
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Nursing Staff, Hospital/*psychology
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Nursing Service, Hospital/*standards
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Middle Aged
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Male
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Humans
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Female
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*Attitude of Health Personnel
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Adult
2.A Study of the Nursing Service Quality and Gap Perceived by Consumers.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2004;34(2):225-234
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to develop a tool that measures the quality of nursing service, to measure the quality of nursing service perceived by consumers, and to identify the gaps between ideal and actual nursing services. METHOD: A questionnaire was developed and distributed to 300 people who had been hospitalized in one of six general hospitals with quality of nursing services in five provincial cities in Korea. For data analysis, the SPSS/WIN(ver 10.0) program was used. RESULT: The 20 attributes included in the instrument of quality of nursing service is abstracted into 2 factors : tangibility and intangibility. In quality analysis, 15 of 20 attributes are minus scores, meaning that those nursing services are perceived as generally low. However among the minus scores' attributes, only two attributes are significant statistically. Gaps between importance and performance of the nursing service exists in 19 among 20 attributes. CONCLUSION: Nursing service quality (performance-expectation) needs to be improved, and Gaps (importance-performance) reduced. In addition, a tool measuring nursing service quality has to be developed so nurses can deal successfully with the quality and gaps of nursing service perceived by consumers.
Adult
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Female
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Humans
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Korea
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Nursing Service, Hospital/*standards
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*Patient Satisfaction
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Quality Assurance, Health Care
3.Nurse-Patient Interaction Patterns and Patient Satisfaction in the Emergency Department.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2010;40(1):99-109
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to identify effective nurse interaction patterns with patients in the emergency department. METHODS: For this study, video technology was used to record complete conversations between the nurse and patient. The participants were 28 nurses and 63 patients in the emergency department at one university hospital located in Seoul. The data were collected from November, 2002 to April, 2003. The video recordings were observed for 4 hr for each case and coded using an adapted version of Roter's Interaction Analysis System (RIAS). The data were analyzed using cluster analysis to identify the patterns of nurse-patient interaction. RESULTS: Cluster analysis revealed 4 distinct nurse interaction patterns; 1) "closed" characterized by orientation and negative talk, 2) "positive" characterized by positive affective talk, 3) "informative and directing" characterized by task-focused behavior including data gathering, and giving information about medical condition and treatment, 4) "facilitative" characterized by balance of psychosocial and biomedical topics. Patient satisfaction was highest in the facilitative interaction pattern. CONCLUSION: The patient centered interaction pattern, balancing information exchange and psychosocial exchange are the most effective interactions in the emergency department, suggesting that effective interaction skill is a core clinical nursing intervention in acute care.
Adult
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Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Cluster Analysis
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Emergency Service, Hospital/*standards
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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*Nurse-Patient Relations
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Nursing Staff, Hospital/*psychology/standards
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*Patient Satisfaction
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Universities
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Videotape Recording