A2 Refereed review article in a scientific journal

Introduction and Systematic Review of the Good Nursing Care Scale




AuthorsMattila, Tuula; Stolt, Minna; Katajisto, Jouko; Leino-Kilpi, Helena

PublisherWiley

Publishing placeHOBOKEN

Publication year2025

JournalJournal of Clinical Nursing

Journal name in sourceJournal of Clinical Nursing

Journal acronymJ CLIN NURS

Volume35

Issue1

First page 5

Last page23

Number of pages19

ISSN0962-1067

eISSN1365-2702

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.17486(external)

Web address https://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.17486(external)

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/458945616(external)


Abstract

Aim(s)

To provide an introduction to the Good Nursing Care Scale (GNCS) and systematically review the application of the scale in health research.

Design

Systematic review.

Methods

Empirical studies published in English or Finnish in peer-reviewed journals or as a summary of a PhD thesis where the scale was used for data collection amongst patients were included. Analysis was made by using descriptive statistics, narrative analysis, and evaluation of psychometric properties.

Data Sources

PubMed, CINAHL, Cochrane, and Scopus in October 2023.

Results

A total of 26 full-text studies and summaries of PhD theses were included in the review. The GNCS has been developed systematically, and the theoretical structure has remained stable. The studies indicate a high level of patient-centered quality of nursing care. Validity and reliability evaluation and reporting were systematic in the studies and mainly indicate sufficient level. Variations between countries are not large, supporting the international use of the GNCS.

Conclusions

Patient-centered quality of nursing care is predominantly at high levels. However, systematic evaluation is needed to provide longitudinal data. For that purpose, the GNCS is one potential instrument.

Implications for the Profession and Patient Care

Support for the use of existing, tested instruments is encouraged to provide critical ideas for the future needs of nurse practitioners, managers, teachers and researchers.

Impact

This paper impacts researchers interested in systematic evaluation of the patient-centered quality of nursing care and for practitioners taking care of patients. For researchers, it introduces a relevant instrument, the GNCS, for analysing the quality or for comparing the quality with other instruments. For practitioners, it produces evidence of the usability of the GNCS.

Reporting Method

PRISMA guided the systematic review, and the COSMIN guideline was used for quality appraisal of included studies.

Patient or Public contribution

No Patient or Public contribution.


Downloadable publication

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Funding information in the publication
This study is supported by the Department of Nursing Science, University of Turku, and research funding by the Finnish government, the Hospital District of Southwest Finland (13762).


Last updated on 2025-27-01 at 19:50