Abstract

The development of quality assurance programs for psychiatric care has increased the interest in quality of care and accountability from the patient's perspective. However, most investigations of patient satisfaction use instruments which rate aspects of care defined and held to be important by professionals and care givers. The aims of this study were 2-fold. To map descriptive characteristics of ideal inpatient psychiatric care through open patient interviews, using a sample of 78 hospitalized patients and, secondly, based on a content analysis of these interviews, to have another sample of 77 hospitalized patients rank the importance of 48 treatment characteristics extracted from the qualitative analysis. Results of the content analysis showed that characteristics of ideal inpatient treatment could be classified in six categories: staff-patient relationship, patient co-influence, treatment content, activities, ward atmosphere and staff competence. Results from the patients' rating of the importance of treatment characteristics showed that patients put the highest emphasis on staff empathic qualities: being caring, interested and understanding, respecting patients, devoting time to patients, and creating a safe treatment environment. The least importance was ascribed to characteristics of the physical environment and daily routines on the ward. It is concluded that in order to secure content validity of investigations of the quality of psychiatric inpatient care from the patient's perspective, effort should be put into including the areas of staff-patient relationships and patient information and co-influence.

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