Authors

  1. Radwin, Laurel E. PhD, RN
  2. Cabral, Howard J. PhD
  3. Seibert, Marjorie Nealon MS
  4. Stolzmann, Kelly MS
  5. Meterko, Mark PhD
  6. Evans, Leigh MS
  7. Barker, Anna MS
  8. Bokhour, Barbara PhD

Abstract

Background: Nurse contributions to patient-centered care in primary care clinics are all but ignored in standard patient experience surveys.

 

Purpose: The purpose was to conduct a pilot study to develop and psychometrically assess a scale measuring nurses' and other providers' patient-centered care in Veteran Affairs primary care clinics.

 

Method: We developed a patient experience survey composed of original items and previous studies' items and scales. The survey was field tested online with patients who had a recent clinic appointment. The nonrandom analytic sample comprised 221 patients.

 

Results: Exploratory factor analyses yielded a 36-item, 4-factor solution explaining 76% of the variance. The factors were: (1) Provider Knowing the Person/Individualizing Care (18 items; [alpha] = 0.98); (2) Nurse Knowing the Person (8; 0.95); (3) Nurse Individualizing Care (7; 0.94); and (4) Continuity of Care (3; not calculated). A short form with 23 items was created using stepwise regression. It had the same 4 factors as the long form with 76% of the variance explained.

 

Conclusions: Patients reported distinctive nurse contributions that have not been routinely measured.