| Literature DB >> 22151714 |
Elizabeth A Davies1, Mark M Meterko, Martin P Charns, Marjorie E Nealon Seibert, Paul D Cleary.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Little is known about how to use patient feedback to improve experiences of health care. The Veterans Health Administration (VA) conducts regular patient surveys that have indicated improved care experiences over the past decade. The goal of this study was to assess factors that were barriers to, or promoters of, efforts to improve care experiences in VA facilities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22151714 PMCID: PMC3266219 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Topic areas covered by the semi-structured interview schedule
| The background to support and culture within the facility for developing patient-centered care in general and emotional support specifically |
|---|
| How survey data were received, disseminated, discussed, and understood within facilities |
| Arrangements for quality improvement project management within each facility |
| Usefulness of any resources or tools provided within the VA or outside |
| How decisions were made about which care processes should be selected for improvement |
| Strategies and interventions required for patient-centered care and any barriers discovered |
| Staff skills, training and incentives required for patient-centered care and any barriers discovered |
| Arrangements for evaluating the success of implementation and for sustaining any changes that occurred. |
Summary of promoters and barriers to the use of survey data found in case studies of two VA facilities
| Facility 1 | Facility 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Nursing leaders had developed a patient-centered culture following external inspection in the middle of study period that was critical of care. This led to new quality improvement structures meeting JCAHO accreditation. | Clinical and nursing leaders had identified that patient-centered care needed to improve after comparing scores to other facilities at the beginning of the study period. This was in the context of developing many data-driven improvements in clinical care and raising the profile of quality improvement. | |
| Too few quality improvement staff to exploit the data fully. | Large facility size and rapid turnover of patients and junior staff. | |
| Clinicians are beginning to ask for provider specific feedback. | Clinicians are involved in interpreting results, developing improvement plans and new surveys. | |
| Clinicians and other staff can be skeptical about results. | Nurses are less familiar with survey results. | |
| Quality improvement staff disseminate the OPQ survey data and teach other staff about it. | Administrative staff disseminate and present the OPQ survey data. Senior nursing staff teach others about them. | |
| OPQ quarterly data not seen as a large enough sample or representative enough. | ||