1. Nurses' Perceptions of Nurse–Physician Collaboration and Quality of Care in Public Hospitals.
- Author
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Al-Bustanji, Muhammad Fuad, Rayan, Ahmad, Eshah, Nidal F., Masa'deh, Rami, Baqeas, Manal Hassan, Rayyan, Nadin, Rayyan, Deema, and ALBashtawy, Mohammed
- Subjects
PUBLIC hospitals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDICAL quality control ,T-test (Statistics) ,INCOME ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SENSORY perception ,SEX distribution ,NURSE-patient ratio ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AGE distribution ,NURSES' attitudes ,NURSE-physician relationships ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,DATA analysis software ,INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
Introduction: Nurse–physician collaboration is a fundamental part of the healthcare information flow, while poor or improper collaboration could result in poor healthcare outcomes and increased medical errors. Objective: This study investigated the relationship between nurse–physician collaboration and the perceived quality of healthcare services offered in Jordanian public hospitals, and associated factors. Methods: A descriptive correlational research design was used. A sample of 385 nurses employed in five Jordanian public hospitals was recruited. Nurse–Physician Collaboration Scale was used to assess collaboration, while the HEALTHQUAL scale was used to evaluate healthcare service quality. The IBM SPSS software (version 26) was used to analyze the data. Results: There was a positive correlation between nurse–physician collaboration and the perceived quality of healthcare services provided to patients (r = 0.778, p <.01). There was variability in the perception of nurse–physician collaboration based on gender, RN-to-patient staffing ratios, age, and income level (p <.05). No association was found between nurses' demographics and their perceptions of the quality of healthcare services provided to patients. Conclusions: Healthcare organizations should implement effective practices to promote nurse–physician collaboration, which could subsequently improve the quality of tangible services provided to patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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