Developing and validating a novel staff questionnaire to identify barriers and enablers to nutrition and mealtime care on hospital wards

Author:

Young Adrienne12ORCID,Kozica‐Olenski Samantha34,Mallan Kimberley5,McRae Prue3,Treleaven Elise13,Walsh Zoe6,Mudge Alison37

Affiliation:

1. Dietetics and Food Services Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

2. Centre for Health Services Research University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

3. Internal Medicine Research Unit Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

4. Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. School of Behavioural and Health Sciences Australian Catholic University Brisbane Queensland Australia

6. Nutrition and Dietetics, Community and Oral Health Metro North Health Melbourne Victoria Australia

7. Greater Brisbane Medical School University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractAimsImproving hospital nutrition and mealtime care is complex and often requires multifaceted interventions and implementation strategies to change how staff, wards and systems operate. This study aimed to develop and validate a staff questionnaire to identify multilevel barriers and enablers to optimal nutrition and mealtime care on hospital wards, to inform and evaluate local quality improvement.MethodsLiterature review, multidisciplinary focus groups and end‐user testing informed questionnaire development and establishment of content and face validity. To determine the construct validity, the questionnaire was administered to ward staff working in five wards across two facilities (acute hospital, rehabilitation unit). Exploratory factor analysis was used to estimate the number of factors and to guide decisions about whether to retain or reject individual items. Scale reliability was assessed using Cronbach's alpha.ResultsThe questionnaire was completed by 138 staff, with most respondents being nurses (57%) and working in the acute care facility (76%). Exploratory factor analysis supported construct validity of four of the original seven subscales. The final questionnaire consisted of 17 items and 4 sub sub‐scales related to (1) Personal Staff Role; (2) Food Service; (3) Organisational Support, and (4) Family Involvement; each sub‐scale demonstrated good reliability with Cronbach's alpha values all >0.70.ConclusionThis novel and brief questionnaire shows good reliability and preliminary evidence of construct validity in this small sample. It provides a potentially useful instrument to identify barriers and enablers to nutrition and mealtime care from the staff perspective and inform where improvement efforts should be focused.

Funder

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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