Author/Authors :
Kim, Youlim Department of Internal Medicine - Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam , Min, Jinsoo Department of Internal Medicine - Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam , Lim, Gajin Department of Internal Medicine - Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam , Lee, Jung-Kyu Department of Internal Medicine - Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul , Lee, Hannah Department of Anesthesiology - Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul , Lee, Jinwoo Department of Internal Medicine - Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul , Kim, Kyung Su Department of Emergency Medicine - Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul , Park, Jong Sun Department of Internal Medicine - Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam , Cho, Young-Jae Department of Internal Medicine - Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam , Jo, You Hwan Department of Emergency Medicine - Seoul National University Bundang Hospital - Seongnam, Korea , Rhu, Hogeol Department of Anesthesiology - Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul , Kim, Kyu-seok Department of Emergency Medicine - Seoul National University Bundang Hospital - Seongnam, Korea , Lee, Sang-Min Department of Internal Medicine - Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul , Lee, Yeon Joo Department of Internal Medicine - Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam
Abstract :
Background: A number of questionnaires designed for analyzing family members’ inconvenience and demands in intensive care unit
(ICU) care have been developed and validated in North America. The family satisfaction in the intensive care Unit-24 (FS-ICU-24) questionnaire is one of the most widely used of these instruments. This study aimed to translate the FS-ICU-24 questionnaire into Korean
and validate the Korean version of the questionnaire.
Methods: The study was conducted in the medical, surgical, and emergency ICUs at three tertiary hospitals. Relatives of all patients
hospitalized for at least 48 hours were enrolled for this study participants. The validation process included the measurement of construct validity, internal consistency, and interrater reliability. The questionnaire consists of 24 items divided between two subscales:
satisfaction with care (14 items) and satisfaction with decision making (10 items).
Results: In total, 200 family members of 176 patients from three hospitals completed the FS-ICU-24 questionnaire. Construct validity
for the questionnaire was superior to that observed for a visual analog scale (Spearman’s r = 0.84, p < 0.001). Cronbach’s αs were 0.83
and 0.80 for the satisfaction with care and satisfaction with decision making subscales, respectively. The mean (± standard deviation)
total FS-ICU-24 score was 75.44 ± 17.70, and participants were most satisfied with consideration of their needs (82.13 ± 21.03) and
least satisfied with the atmosphere in the ICU waiting room (35.38 ± 34.84).
Conclusions: The Korean version of the FS-ICU-24 questionnaire demonstrated good validity and could be a useful instrument with
which to measure family members’ satisfaction about ICU care.
Keywords :
family , intensive care units , satisfaction , validation studies