AimTo assess the agreement between patients' self-reported degree-of-worry (DOW) and nurses' evaluation of patients' DOW.
DesignAn observational cohort study with patients and their primary nurses.
MethodsBetween February 22 to March 27, 2021 data collection among patients and their nurses in an emergency department was carried out. Patients ≥18 years, cognitively intact and Danish or English speaking were eligible to participate. Nurses regardless of seniority and gender were eligible for participation. The singleitem degree-of-worry measure, "how worried are you about the condition you are here today on a scale from 1 to 10, where 1 is minimally worried and 10 is maximum worried" as well as information on gender, age, co-morbidity, triage level, and medical reason for encounter was collected from patients. The corresponding nurses were asked; "how worried do you think your patient is about the condition he/she is there today on a scale from 1 to 10, where 1 is minimally worried and 10 is maximum worried?" Nurses also supplied data on gender, age, seniority as a registered nurse and in the ED. Agreement between patients' self-reported degree-of-worry and nurses' evaluation of patients' degree-of-worry was assessed with weighted Cohen's Kappa.
ResultsA total of 194 patient-nurse pairs were included for analysis. The agreement between patients' DOW and nurses' evaluation of patients' DOW categorized as DOWlow, DOWmiddle, and DOWhighwas in total agreement in n=85 pairs (43.8%) of the ratings, which corresponds to a weighted Cohen's Kappa of 0.19 (0.08 to 0.30; p<0.001).
ConclusionNurses estimate of their patients' DOW was in very poor agreement. This indicates that nurses are not able to assess the patient's DOW to a satisfactory level. This result is troubling as it may have serious consequences for patient care as it indicates that the nurses do not know their patients' perspectives.
Patient or Public ContributionPatients were consulted and contributed in regard to the development of the DOW scale -for the current study participants gave informed consent to participation, only.