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Critical care medicine · Jun 2018
Climate of Respect Evaluation in ICUs: Development of an Instrument (ICU-CORE).
- Mary Catherine Beach, Rachel Topazian, Kitty S Chan, Jeremy Sugarman, and Gail Geller.
- Berman Bioethics Institute, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
- Crit. Care Med. 2018 Jun 1; 46 (6): e502-e507.
ObjectivesTo develop a valid, reliable measure that reflected the environment of respectfulness within the ICU setting.DesignWe developed a preliminary survey instrument based on conceptual domains of respect identified through prior qualitative analyses of ICU patient, family member, and clinician perspectives. The initial instrument consisted of 21 items. After five cognitive interviews and 16 pilot surveys, we revised the instrument to include 23 items. We used standard psychometric methods to analyze the instrument.SettingsEight ICUs serving adult patients affiliated with a large university health system.SubjectsICU clinicians.InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsBased on 249 responses, we identified three factors and created subscales: General Respect, Respectful Behaviors, and Disrespectful Behaviors. The General Respect subscale had seven items (α = 0.932) and reflected how often patients in the ICU are treated with respect, in a dignified manner, as an individual, equally to all other patients, on the "same level" as the ICU team, as a person, and as you yourself would want to be treated. The Respectful Behaviors subscale had 10 items (α = 0.926) and reflected how often the ICU team responds to patient and/or family anxiety, makes an effort to get to know the patient and family as people, listens carefully, explains things thoroughly, gives the opportunity to provide input into care, protects patient modesty, greets when entering room, and talks to sedated patients. The subscale measuring disrespect has four items (α = 0.702) and reflects how often the ICU team dismisses family concerns, talks down to patients and families, speaks disrespectfully behind their backs, and gets frustrated with patients and families.ConclusionsWe created a reliable set of scales to measure the climate of respectfulness in intensive care settings. These measures can be used for ongoing quality improvement that aim to enhance the experience of ICU patients and their families.
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