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Is practice variation determined in the needs assessments performed by Dutch home care nurses? A cross-sectional multilevel analysis

Por: van Dorst · J. I. · Schwenke · M. · Hameleers · N. · Bleijenberg · N. · Brabers · A. E. · de Jong · J. D. · de Vries · E. · van den Bulck · A. O. · Zwakhalen · S. M.
Objectives

While needs assessment is the starting point of good quality care, there is anecdotal evidence of patients receiving different care in similar circumstances. This study aims to investigate whether practice variation exists in needs assessments conducted by home care nurses and to identify the factors influencing these assessments.

Design

A cross-sectional, quantitative retrospective study.

Setting

Primary care; home care nursing in the Netherlands in 2023.

Participants

Sampling was based on criterion sampling. Home care organisations were approached based on the following inclusion criteria: organisations providing home care nursing in the Netherlands, organisations from various regions of the country and organisations offering different types of home care nursing (eg, paediatric or palliative care), funded under the Dutch Health Insurance Act (Zvw). Organisations were excluded if they provided home care nursing funded by sources other than the Dutch Health Insurance Act. Home care nurses were recruited from participating organisations, each of whom had recently assessed the care needs of at least five patients. In total, 28 organisations and 258 home care nurses participated in this study, thereby yielding data from 1615 patients.

Primary and secondary outcome measures

Assessed and delivered minutes of home care per patient per week.

Results

Variation was primarily associated with patient-related factors. After accounting for these factors, 83% (assessed minutes) and 88% (delivered minutes) of the total variation was attributed to the patient level, 8% (assessed minutes) and 10% (delivered minutes) to the home care nurses’ level and 9% (assessed minutes) and 2% (delivered minutes) to the organisational level. Due to inadequate documentation in electronic health records, many missing values were identified.

Conclusions

The lack of nursing documentation suggests that missing factors may have contributed to variations in needs assessments. Thus, further research should comprehensively explore the patient-related factors currently absent from nursing documentation.

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