Revista Espanola de Enfermedades Digestivas (Jun 2013)

Development of quality standards in inflammatory bowel disease management and design of an evaluation tool of nursing care

  • Antonio Torrejón,
  • Lorena Oltra,
  • Paloma Hernández-Sampelayo,
  • Laura Marín,
  • Valle García-Sánchez,
  • Francesc Casellas,
  • Noelia Alfaro,
  • Pablo Lázaro,
  • María Isabel Vera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4321/s1130-01082013000500004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 105, no. 5
pp. 262 – 271

Abstract

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Background and aims: nursing management of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is highly relevant for patient care and outcomes. However, there is evidence of substantial variability in clinical practices. The objectives of this study were to develop standards of healthcare quality for nursing management of IBD and elaborate the evaluation tool "Nursing Care Quality in IBD Assessment" (NCQ-IBD) based on these standards. Methods: a 178-item healthcare quality questionnaire was developed based on a systematic review of IBD nursing management literature. The questionnaire was used to perform two 2-round Delphi studies: Delphi A included 27 IBD healthcare professionals and Delphi B involved 12 patients. The NCQ-IBD was developed from the list of items resulting from both Delphi studies combined with the Scientific Committee's expert opinion. Results: the final NCQ-IBD consists of 90 items, organized in 13 sections measuring the following aspects of nursing management of IBD: infrastructure, services, human resources, type of organization, nursing responsibilities, nurse-provided information to the patient, nurses training, annual audits of nursing activities, and nursing research in IBD. Using the NCQ-IBD to evaluate these components allows the rating of healthcare quality for nursing management of IBD into 4 categories: A (highest quality) through D (lowest quality). Conclusions: the use of the NCQ-IBD tool to evaluate nursing management quality of IBD identifies areas in need of improvement and thus contribute to an enhancement of care quality and reduction in clinical practice variations.

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