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Inter-rater reliability of the QuIS as an assessment of the quality of staff-inpatient interactions

Inter-rater reliability of the QuIS as an assessment of the quality of staff-inpatient interactions
Inter-rater reliability of the QuIS as an assessment of the quality of staff-inpatient interactions
Background: Recent studies of the quality of in-hospital care have used the Quality of Interaction Schedule (QuIS) to rate interactions observed between staff and inpatients in a variety of ward conditions. The QuIS was developed and evaluated in nursing and residential care. We set out to develop methodology for summarising information from inter-rater reliability studies of the QuIS in the acute hospital setting.
Methods: Staff-inpatient interactions were rated by trained staff observing care delivered during two-hour observation periods. Anticipating the possibility of the quality of care varying depending on ward conditions, we selected wards and times of day to reflect the variety of daytime care delivered to patients. We estimated inter-rater reliability using weighted kappa, Kw , combined over observation periods to produce an overall, summary estimate, Kˆw. Weighting schemes putting different emphasis on the severity of misclassification between QuIS categories were compared, as were different methods of combining observation period specific estimates.
Results: Estimated Kˆw did not vary greatly depending on the weighting scheme employed, but we found simple averaging of estimates across observation periods to produce a higher value of inter-rater reliability due to over-weighting observation periods with fewest interactions.
Conclusions: We recommend that researchers evaluating the inter-rater reliability of the QuIS by observing staff-inpatient interactions during observation periods representing the variety of ward conditions in which care takes place, should summarise inter-rater reliability by Kw , weighted according to our scheme A4. Observation period specific estimates should be combined into an overall, single summary statistic Kˆw random, using a random effects approach, with Kˆw random, to be interpreted as the mean of the distribution of Kw across the variety of ward conditions. We draw attention to issues in the analysis and interpretation of inter-rater reliability studies incorporating distinct phases of data collection that may generalise more widely.
1471-2288
1-12
Mesa-Eguiagaray, Ines
581065b0-e101-454a-9954-366ce8b9a00e
Böhning, Dankmar
1df635d4-e3dc-44d0-b61d-5fd11f6434e1
McLean, Chris
04c1b951-0f57-4d2e-a910-ea814c785166
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b
Bridges, Jackie
57e80ebe-ee5f-4219-9bbc-43215e8363cd
Pickering, Ruth M.
4a828314-7ddf-4f96-abed-3407017d4c90
Mesa-Eguiagaray, Ines
581065b0-e101-454a-9954-366ce8b9a00e
Böhning, Dankmar
1df635d4-e3dc-44d0-b61d-5fd11f6434e1
McLean, Chris
04c1b951-0f57-4d2e-a910-ea814c785166
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b
Bridges, Jackie
57e80ebe-ee5f-4219-9bbc-43215e8363cd
Pickering, Ruth M.
4a828314-7ddf-4f96-abed-3407017d4c90

Mesa-Eguiagaray, Ines, Böhning, Dankmar, McLean, Chris, Griffiths, Peter, Bridges, Jackie and Pickering, Ruth M. (2016) Inter-rater reliability of the QuIS as an assessment of the quality of staff-inpatient interactions. BMC Medical Research Methodology, 16, 1-12, [171]. (doi:10.1186/s12874-016-0266-4).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Recent studies of the quality of in-hospital care have used the Quality of Interaction Schedule (QuIS) to rate interactions observed between staff and inpatients in a variety of ward conditions. The QuIS was developed and evaluated in nursing and residential care. We set out to develop methodology for summarising information from inter-rater reliability studies of the QuIS in the acute hospital setting.
Methods: Staff-inpatient interactions were rated by trained staff observing care delivered during two-hour observation periods. Anticipating the possibility of the quality of care varying depending on ward conditions, we selected wards and times of day to reflect the variety of daytime care delivered to patients. We estimated inter-rater reliability using weighted kappa, Kw , combined over observation periods to produce an overall, summary estimate, Kˆw. Weighting schemes putting different emphasis on the severity of misclassification between QuIS categories were compared, as were different methods of combining observation period specific estimates.
Results: Estimated Kˆw did not vary greatly depending on the weighting scheme employed, but we found simple averaging of estimates across observation periods to produce a higher value of inter-rater reliability due to over-weighting observation periods with fewest interactions.
Conclusions: We recommend that researchers evaluating the inter-rater reliability of the QuIS by observing staff-inpatient interactions during observation periods representing the variety of ward conditions in which care takes place, should summarise inter-rater reliability by Kw , weighted according to our scheme A4. Observation period specific estimates should be combined into an overall, single summary statistic Kˆw random, using a random effects approach, with Kˆw random, to be interpreted as the mean of the distribution of Kw across the variety of ward conditions. We draw attention to issues in the analysis and interpretation of inter-rater reliability studies incorporating distinct phases of data collection that may generalise more widely.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 November 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 December 2016
Published date: 7 December 2016
Additional Information: Rated 2-3 star when assessed under UoA2
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 403694
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/403694
ISSN: 1471-2288
PURE UUID: 6a33bb24-cb32-48ca-9425-08efe9ebd054
ORCID for Dankmar Böhning: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0638-7106
ORCID for Chris McLean: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9951-9894
ORCID for Peter Griffiths: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2439-2857
ORCID for Jackie Bridges: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6776-736X

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Date deposited: 09 Dec 2016 09:28
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:07

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Contributors

Author: Ines Mesa-Eguiagaray
Author: Chris McLean ORCID iD
Author: Peter Griffiths ORCID iD
Author: Jackie Bridges ORCID iD

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