Displaying all 3 publications

Abstract:
Sort:
  1. Fauziningtyas R, Chong MC, Setiawan HW, Tan MP
    J Multidiscip Healthc, 2023;16:3379-3392.
    PMID: 37964796 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S436766
    INTRODUCTION: Adverse incidents in nursing home (NH) may occur as the result of inadequate monitoring for signs of unobservable initial complications, medical errors, improper nursing interventions, lack of communication, and inadequate reporting.

    PURPOSE: This study explores incident types, causes, handling, and documentation in Indonesian NHs through a qualitative approach.

    PATIENTS AND METHODS: In-depth interviews were conducted with 23 NH staff members, including managers, nurses, and support staff.

    RESULTS: Five themes and 17 sub-themes emerged, with falls and resident-to-resident abuse as common adverse incidents. Causes included older adults' conditions, environment, and misunderstanding. Follow-up action included first aid, hospital referrals, and assertive communication. Adverse incidents were actively reported through verbal and written reports or WhatsApp groups. Reports and documentation remain unstructured, however, as there were no standard operating procedures regarding incident reporting, documentation, and the types of adverse incidents that staff should report.

    CONCLUSION: Improvements in management, documentation, and reporting adverse incidents are highlighted in this research. Practitioners, nurses, and social workers should develop guidelines for handling, reporting, and documenting adverse incidents in NHs.

  2. Awadh Bamatraf A, Chong MC, Mazlan M, Che CC, Fauziningtyas R, Nursalam N
    Nurs Open, 2021 09;8(5):2722-2731.
    PMID: 33729702 DOI: 10.1002/nop2.833
    AIM: To develop and psychometrically test the instrument for measuring the knowledge of traumatic brain injury of informal carers.

    DESIGN: Instrument development.

    METHOD: Focus group discussions were conducted among informal carers and healthcare specialists in March 2017. The content validity was determined by the mean of the item content validity index. A reliability test was performed by the Kuder-Richardson 20 and Pearson's correlation coefficient among 40 informal carers of patients with a traumatic brain injury in the rehabilitation medicine department of a tertiary hospital from August-September 2017.

    RESULTS: The final 34-item questionnaire covers the nature of traumatic brain injury, the consequences of traumatic brain injury, the rehabilitation process, and the role of the caregiver. The item content means ranged from 0.8-1.00, and the difficulty of knowledge items ranged from 0.18-0.98. The internal consistency reliability and correlation coefficient were 0.70 and 0.84, respectively.

  3. Fauziningtyas R, Chan CM, Pin TM, Dhamanti I, Smith GD
    Int J Older People Nurs, 2023 Sep;18(5):e12553.
    PMID: 37334471 DOI: 10.1111/opn.12553
    INTRODUCTION: The development of resident safety culture in nursing homes (NH) represents a major challenge for governments and NH owners, with a requirement for suitable tools to assess safety culture. Indonesia currently lacks suitable safety cultures scales for NH.

    OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the psychometric properties of the translated Indonesian version of the Nursing Home Survey on Patient Safety Culture (NHSOPSC-INA).

    METHODS: This study was a cross-sectional survey conducted using NHSOPSC-INA. A total of 258 participants from 20 NH in Indonesia were engaged. Participants included NH managers, caregivers, administrative staff, nurses and support staff with at least junior high school education. The SPSS 23.0 was used for descriptive data analysis and internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) estimation. The AMOS (version 22) was used to perform confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) on the questionnaire's dimensional structure.

    RESULTS: The NHSOPSC CFA test originally had 12 dimensions with 42 items and was modified to eight dimensions with 26 items in the Indonesian version. The deleted dimensions were 'Staffing' (4 items), 'Compliance with procedure' (3 items), 'Training and skills' (3 items), 'non-punitive response to mistakes' (4 items) and 'Organisational learning' (2 items). The subsequent analysis revealed an accepted model with 26 NHSOPSC-INA items (root mean square error of approximation = 0.091, comparative fit index = 0.815, Tucker-Lewis index = 0.793, CMIN = 798.488, df = 291, CMIN/Df = 2.74, GFI = 0.782, AGFI = 0.737, p 

Related Terms
Filters
Contact Us

Please provide feedback to Administrator ([email protected])

External Links