Quality and Patient Safety
Measuring the quality of anaesthesia from a patient’s perspective: development, validation, and implementation of a short questionnaire

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Background

The primary aim of this study was to develop and validate a short psychometric instrument to assess the patient’s perception of the quality of anaesthesia.

Methods

In Part 1, the Perception of Quality in Anaesthesia (PQA) questionnaire was developed, pilot tested, and validated. Attributes of high-quality anaesthesia were identified using a process that restricted input to patients and members of the public. In Part 2, patient cohorts completed the PQA before, and after, a 6 month period where anaesthetists were given individualized performance data using questions from the PQA.

Results

In Part 1, items in the PQA were identified and ranked by 120 patients and members of the public. Validity and reliability of the PQA was assessed by 714 patients. Principal component analysis showed that the PQA comprised five factors: attention/gentleness; pain management; information/confidence; postoperative nausea or vomiting (PONV); and concerns addressed. In Part 2, there were 2046 patient participants in the pre-feedback cohort, 4251 in the feedback cohort, and 1421 in the post-feedback cohort. Unsatisfactory experience in at least one PQA factor was described by 45.2% [95% confidence interval (CI) 43.1–47.4%] during the pre-feedback period, and 35.0% (95% CI 32.6–37.6%) during the post-feedback period.

Conclusions

We developed and validated a patient-derived questionnaire to measure the patient’s perception of anaesthesia quality. PONV, postoperative pain management, and communication with the anaesthetist are the most important features of the patient’s experience. Feedback of PQA performance scores to anaesthetists can lead to improved patient experience.

Key words

patient satisfaction
psychometrics
quality improvement

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This report was previously presented, in part, at the 2010 ANZCA annual scientific meeting.