Patient and nurse preferences for implementation of bedside handover: Do they agree? Findings from a discrete choice experiment

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Abstract

Objective: To describe and compare patients' and nurses' preferences for the implementation of bedside handover. Design: Discrete choice experiment describing handover choices using six characteristics: whether the patient is invited to participate; whether a family member/carer/friend is invited; the number of nurses present; the level of patient involvement; the information content; and privacy. Setting: Two Australian hospitals. Participants: Adult patients (n=401) and nurses (n=200) recruited from medical wards. Main outcome measures: Mean importance scores for handover characteristics estimated using mixed multinomial logit regression of the choice data. Results: Both patient and nurse participants preferred handover at the bedside rather than elsewhere (P

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Whitty, J. A., Spinks, J., Bucknall, T., Tobiano, G., & Chaboyer, W. (2017). Patient and nurse preferences for implementation of bedside handover: Do they agree? Findings from a discrete choice experiment. Health Expectations, 20(4), 742–750. https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12513

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