Abstract
The measurement of patient satisfaction is an increasingly important module of quality assurance, since patient satisfaction constitutes a significant aspect of outcome quality. But up to now there has been an extensive lack of instruments for the collection of data concerning patient satisfaction whose psychometric quality has been sufficiently proved. Since psychometric quality can be assumed to be a precondition for providing meaningful suggestions for a comprehensive quality management, it seems all the more important to scrutinize instruments for their psychometric quality and to further develop them if need be. The object of the study at hand is the presentation of a selfadministered instrument and its psychometric examination. The underlying data are derived from a sample of 14 597 patients from 27 departments of 25 hospitals who were surveyed following inpatient treatment.
Both an item analysis and results concerning reliability and validity indicate that the “patient monitor” provides an instrument that can psychometrically sufficiently represent patient satisfaction in inpatient clinics.
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