Literature DB >> 10185418

Customer care. Patient satisfaction in the prehospital setting.

G T Doering1.   

Abstract

The focus of the study was to prioritize six emergency medical service treatment factors in terms of their impact upon patient satisfaction in the prehospital setting. The six treatment areas analyzed were: EMS response time; medical care provided on scene; explanation of care by the provider; the provider's ability to reduce patient anxiety; the provider's ability to meet the patient's non-medical needs; and the level of courtesy/politeness shown by the EMS provider toward the patient. Telephone interviews were conducted with both patients and bystanders to obtain their perception of how well the system met their needs. The study analyzed how the six issues were rated and then evaluated the impact an individual's low score in a category had on that person's overall rating of the service provided. The overall satisfaction rating is not a calculated score, but an overall score specified by the respondent. The effect each issue had on the respondent's overall rating was determined by averaging the overall ratings for a category's low scorers, averaging the overall ratings for high scorers and then measuring the difference. Results of the study indicate that the factor with the greatest negative impact on patient satisfaction came from a perceived lack of crew courtesy and politeness. Respondents who indicated a fair to poor score in this category decreased their overall score by 60.2%. Ratings in other categories yielded the following results: When respondents rated the response time as fair to poor, their average overall rating showed an 18.4% decrease. When respondents rated the quality of medical care as fair to poor, their average overall rating showed a decrease of 22.6%. When the crew's ability to explain what was happening to the patient was rated as fair to poor, the average overall score dropped 33.6%. When the EMT's and medic's ability to reduce the patient's anxiety was rated fair to poor, average overall score declined by 32.6%. Finally, when the crew's ability to satisfy a patient's non-medical needs was rated as fair to poor, the average overall score diminished by 37.4%.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 10185418

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Emerg Med Serv        ISSN: 0094-6575


  2 in total

1.  Patient satisfaction with prehospital emergency care following a hip fracture: a prospective questionnaire-based study.

Authors:  Glenn Larsson; Ulf Strömberg; Cecilia Rogmark; Anna Nilsdotter
Journal:  BMC Nurs       Date:  2018-08-16

2.  Postal survey methodology to assess patient satisfaction in a suburban emergency medical services system: an observational study.

Authors:  Aaron W Bernard; Christopher J Lindsell; Daniel A Handel; Lindsey Collett; Paul Gallo; Kevin D Kaiser; Donald Locasto
Journal:  BMC Emerg Med       Date:  2007-06-15
  2 in total

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