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Authors Cinocca S, Rucci P, Randazzo C, Teale E, Pianori D, Ciotti E, Fantini MP
Received 20 April 2017
Accepted for publication 20 June 2017
Published 27 September 2017 Volume 2017:11 Pages 1671—1676
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S140041
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Lucy Goodman
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Johnny Chen
Background: Intermediate care (IC) services are a key component of integrated care
for elderly people, providing a link between hospital and home through
provision of rehabilitation and health and social care. The Patient Reported
Experience Measures (PREMs) are designed to measure user experience of care in
IC settings.
Objective: To examine the feasibility and the scaling properties
of the Italian version of PREMs questionnaires for use in IC services.
Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted on consecutive
users of 1 home-based and 4 bed-based IC services in Emilia-Romagna (Italy).
The main outcome measure was the PREMs questionnaire results. PREMs for each
home- and bed-based IC services were translated, back-translated, and adapted
through consensus among the members of the advisory board and pilot testing of
face validity in 15 patients. A total of 199 questionnaires were returned from
users of bed-based services and 185 were returned by mail from users of
home-based services. The return rates and responses were examined. Mokken
analysis was used to examine the scaling properties of the PREMs.
Results: Analysis performed on the bed-based PREMs
(N=154) revealed that 13 items measured the same construct and formed a
moderate-strength scale (Loevinger H=0.488) with good reliability (Cronbach’s
alpha =0.843). Analysis of home-based PREMs (N=134 records) revealed that 15
items constituted a strong scale (Loevinger H=0.543) with good reliability
(Cronbach’s alpha =0.875).
Conclusion: The Italian versions of the bed- and home-based
IC-PREMs questionnaires proved to be valid and reliable tools to assess
patients’ experience of care. Future plans include monitoring user experience
over time in the same facilities and in other Italian IC settings for
between-service benchmarking.
Keywords: intermediate
care, patient-reported experience measures, validation, elderly
