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Patient‐reported outcomes of the nurse–patient relationship in psychiatric inpatient hospitals: A multicentred descriptive cross‐sectional study.

Authors :
Desmet, Karel
Bracke, Piet
Deproost, Eddy
Goossens, Peter J. J.
Vandewalle, Joeri
Vercruysse, Lieke
Beeckman, Dimitri
Van Hecke, Ann
Kinnaer, Lise‐Marie
Verhaeghe, Sofie
Source :
Journal of Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.); Jun2023, Vol. 30 Issue 3, p568-579, 12p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Accessible Summary: What is known on the subject?: Psychiatric and/or mental health nurses are struggling to measure the outcomes of the nurse–patient relationship.Collecting nurse‐sensitive patient outcomes is a strategy to provide outcomes of a nurse–patient relationship from patients' perspectives.Because there was no validated scale, the Mental Health Nurse‐Sensitive Patient Outcome‐Scale (six‐point Likert‐scale) was recently developed and psychometrically evaluated. What the paper adds to existing knowledge?: This is the first study using the Mental Health Nurse‐Sensitive Patient Outcome‐scale to measure nurse‐sensitive patient outcomes of the nurse–patient relationship in psychiatric hospitals. Moderate to good average scores for the MH‐NURSE‐POS total (4.42) and domains scores (≥4.09). are observed. Especially outcomes related to 'motivation' to follow and stay committed to the treatment received high average scores (≥4.60).Our results are consistent with the patient‐reported effect(s) of relation‐based nursing in qualitative research.The scores generate evidence to support the outcomes of the nurse–patient relationship and implicates that further investment in (re)defining and elaborating nurse–patient relationships in mental healthcare is meaningful and justified.More comparative patient‐reported data can determine how nurse‐sensitive patient outcomes are affected by the patient, nurse, and context. What are the implications for practice?: Demonstrating patient‐reported outcomes of the nurse–patient relationship can be important to enhance the therapeutic alliance between nurses and patients, organize responsive nursing care, and create nursing visibility in mental healthcare. Further nursing staff training on interpersonal competencies, such as self‐awareness and cultural sensitivity, can be pivotal to achieving the patient‐reported outcomes for inpatients with mental health problems. Introduction: Identifying patient‐reported outcomes of the nurse–patient relationship is a priority in inpatient mental healthcare to guide clinical decision‐making and quality improvement initiatives. Moreover, demonstrating nurse‐sensitive patient outcomes can be a strategy to avoid further erosion of the specialism of psychiatric and/or mental health nursing. Aim/Question To measure nurse‐sensitive patient outcomes of the nurse–patient relationship. Method: In a multicentred cross‐sectional study, 296 inpatients admitted to five psychiatric hospitals completed the recently developed and validated Mental Health Nurse‐Sensitive Patient Outcome‐Scale (MH‐NURSE‐POS). The MH‐NURSE‐POS consists of 21 items (six‐point Likert‐scale) in four domains: 'growth', 'expression', 'control', and 'motivation'. Results: Participants displayed moderate to good average scores for the MH‐NURSE‐POS total (4.42) and domain scores (≥4.09). Especially outcomes related to 'motivation' to follow and stay committed to the treatment received high average scores (≥4.60). Discussion The results demonstrate that patients perceive the nurse–patient relationship and the care given by psychiatric and/or mental health nurses as contributing to their treatment. Implications for Practices: Patient‐reported outcomes can guide nurses and managers to provide and organize nursing care and to build a nurse–patient relationship that has a positive impact on these outcomes. Additionally, outcomes can create nursing visibility as a profession in‐ and outside mental healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13510126
Volume :
30
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163589011
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jpm.12895