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- M S Miles, J Carlson, and S Brunssen.
- School of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 27599-7460, USA.
- J Pediatr Nurs. 1999 Feb 1; 14 (1): 44-50.
AbstractThis report describes the development of an instrument, the Nurse-Parent Support Tool (NPST) designed to measure parents' perception of nursing support during their child's hospitalization. The NPST was based on the Nurse Parent Support Model developed from House's conceptualizations of four domains of support. Thus, the 21-item NPST assesses four dimensions of support: (1) supportive communication and provision of information related to the child's illness, treatments, care, and related issues; (2) parental esteem support focused on respecting, enhancing, and supporting the parental role; (3) emotional support to help the parents cope with their own emotional responses and needs related to the child's illness; and (4) caregiving support involving the quality of care provided to the child. Strong support for the content validity of the NPST derives from the steps used in constructing the instrument. This includes use of a conceptual framework, generating items from the literature, using data from interviews with parents of hospitalized children, and pilot testing with parents and experts. Factor analysis provides support for the underlying construct and significant correlations with another instrument measuring a similar construct provides support for the concurrent validity. The internal consistency reliability is very high. The NPST holds promise for use in nursing research and quality improvement programs in pediatric and neonatal in-patient settings.
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