DEVELOPMENT AND EVALUATION OF AN INSTRUMENT TO MEASURE PARENTAL SATISFACTION WITH QUALITY OF CARE IN NEONATAL FOLLOW-UP
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Abstract
The goal ofthe research presented in this thesis was to develop a reliable and
valid, discriminative instrument to measure parental satisfaction with the quality of care
provided in neonatal follow-up programs. The proposed instrument was developed in a
series ofsteps that involved input from a total of 381 parents of children from two
neonatal follow-up (NFU) programs as well as 24 health care professionals in three NFU
programs in Southern Ontario, Canada. Initially, potential instrument items were
generated from an examination ofrelevant instruments, published research, and focus
groups with health care experts and parents from NFU programs. Applying a clinimetric
approach, only those items that were rated as most important by a sample of parents were
selected to undergo the next step ofinstrument development. After parent pretesting and
content validity assessment by health care professionals, the preliminary instrument was
administered to a second sample of parents and underwent item-analysis. The resulting
16-item instrument captures two dimensions ofparentalsatisfaction with quality of
care -process (the interaction between the health care providers and the parent) and
outcomes (knowledge acquisition and alleviation of parents’ anxiety about their child’s
development). A confirmatory factor analysis supported the multidimensionality ofthe
construct. The psychometric properties ofthe instrument including test-retest reliability
(ICC = 0.72), internal consistency (overall instrument a = 0.90), content validity, and
convergent construct validity were evaluated. These assessment results suggest that the
new instrument has adequate psychometric properties to be utilized as a measure of
parental satisfaction with quality of care in neonatal follow-up programs. This instrument will be an important tool for researchers and clinicians in follow-up clinics across
Canada -to help identify changes that may be needed in how care is delivered and to
ensure that the care provided is meeting the needs ofparents