Patients’ decisional control over care: a cross-national comparison from both the patients’ and
nurses’ points of view
Sammanfattning
Background: Patients’ decisional control over care is the ability or power for patients to decide
what their involvement will be in healthcare decisions. There is evidence of limited agreement
between the perceptions of patients and the perceptions of nurses and/or caregivers with regard to
the degree of patient involvement in the planning and performance of their care.
Aim: To analyse and compare patients’ and nurses’ perceptions of patients’ decisional control over
their own care.
Method: A multisite cross-sectional comparative survey design was employed. Data were collected
from hospitalised surgical inpatients (n = 1315) and their caregivers (n = 960 nurses) in five
European countries. The Individualised Care Scale part B was used for collecting data from both the
patients and nurses. Ethical standards were followed throughout the study.
Results: Significant between-country differences were found between patients and nurses. In all
countries, both patients and nurses regarded that decisional control over care had been actualised
(ICS-B: M = 3.75-4.47 and 3.48-4.33, respectively), but there were significant differences in their
perceptions regarding four of the six items of the decisional control factor of the ICS-B.
Conclusions. The results show that there are disparities between patients’ and nurses’ perceptions of
patient involvement in care, probably due to cultural issues that need further exploration.
Clinical relevance: The disparities between patients’ and nurses’ perceptions on patients’ decisional
control over their care should be taken into consideration as a potential cause of patient
dissatisfaction with nursing care. Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons.