Jornal de Pediatria (May 2023)

Net Promoter Score (NPS) as a tool to assess parental satisfaction in pediatric intensive care units

  • Victoria Noremberg Bitencourt,
  • Francielly Crestani,
  • Marina Zanette Peuckert,
  • Gabriela Rupp Hanzen Andrades,
  • João Ronaldo Mafalda Krauzer,
  • Cíntia de Cassia Cintra,
  • Mariana Lucas da Rocha Cunha,
  • Guilherme Unchalo Eckert,
  • Leandra Girardi,
  • Iná S. Santos,
  • Pedro Celiny Ramos Garcia

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 99, no. 3
pp. 296 – 301

Abstract

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Objective: To verify the performance of the Net Promoter Score (NPS) as a tool to assess parental satisfaction in pediatric intensive care units (PICUs). Methods: The authors conducted an observational cross-sectional multicenter study in the PICUs of 5 hospitals in Brazil. Eligible participants were all parents or legal guardians of PICU-admitted children, aged 18 years or over. The NPS was administered together with the EMpowerment of PArents in THe Intensive Care (EMPATHIC-30), used as the gold standard, and a sociodemographic questionnaire. For analysis, the results were dichotomized into values greater than or equal to the median of the tests. The associations between the 2 tools were evaluated and the distribution of their results was compared. Results: The parents or legal guardians of 78 PICU-admitted children were interviewed. Of the respondents, 85% were women and 62% were in a private hospital. The median NPS was 10 (IQR, 10-10), and the median EMPATHIC-30 score was 5.7 (IQR, 5.4-5.9). Compared with the gold standard, the NPS had a sensitivity of 100% at all cutoff points, except at cutoff 10, where the sensitivity was slightly lower (97.5%). As for specificity, NPS performance was poorer, with values ranging from 0% (NPS ≥ 5) to 47.4% (NPS = 10). Conclusions: NPS proved to be a sensitive tool to assess parental satisfaction, but with poor ability to identify dissatisfied users in the sample.

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