D23,
NPSHa is a physical thing and Mother Nature just doesn't care what set of arbitrary units we mortals choose to use. The pump sees stuff at the eye of the impeller and it is either enough to prevent cavatation or not enough - the motive force to get the stuff to that location could have come from a column of liquid, the discharge of a booster pump, or a gas/liquid mixture in an oil field reservoir. It only matters that there is enough stuff to allow the pump to remove the amount of stuff it is designed to move and leave enough stuff behind to prevent phase change. We can measure that difference in stuff in feet, meters, kPa, or Newtons/square furlong. The only differnce between a head switch and a pressure switch is the markings on the face of the gauge.
When I see a statement that "head must be measured in feet", I feel that the author of that statement really thinks the way we report physical characteristics matters. It matters that we use consistent units in calculations, it matters that we communcate the units that we use, but I can't see that it matters what units we used to record a physical parameter.
David