| Literature DB >> 33457641 |
Sansrita Nepal1,2,3, Angela Keniston1,2,3, Kimberly A Indovina1,2, Maria G Frank1,2, Sarah A Stella1,2, Itziar Quinzanos-Alonso1,2, Lauren McBeth1,2, Susan L Moore4,5, Marisha Burden2.
Abstract
Patient experience is increasingly recognized as a measure of health care quality and patient-centered care and is currently measured through the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS). The HCAHPS survey may miss key factors important to patients, and in particular, to underserved patient populations. We performed a qualitative study utilizing semi-structured interviews with 45 hospitalized English- and Spanish-speaking patients and 6 focus groups with physicians, nurses, and administrators at a large, urban safety-net hospital. Four main themes were important to patients: (1) the hospital environment including cleanliness and how hospital policies and procedures impact patients' perceived autonomy, (2) whole-person care, (3) communication with and between care teams and utilizing words that patients can understand, and (4) responsiveness and attentiveness to needs. We found that several key themes that were important to patients are not fully addressed in the HCAHPS survey and there is a disconnect between what patients and care teams believe patients want and what hospital policies drive in the care environment.Entities:
Keywords: patient; patient engagement; patient expectations; patient feedback; satisfaction
Year: 2020 PMID: 33457641 PMCID: PMC7786759 DOI: 10.1177/2374373520942403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Exp ISSN: 2374-3735
Patient Demographics.
| Demographic value | English-speaking | Spanish-speaking |
|---|---|---|
| N = 22 | N = 23 | |
| Age | ||
| 18-29 | 3 (14) | 0 (0) |
| 30-39 | 1 (4) | 5 (22) |
| 40-49 | 2 (9) | 5 (22) |
| 50-59 | 8 (36) | 4 (17) |
| 60-69 | 5 (23) | 4 (17) |
| 70-79 | 3 (14) | 3 (13) |
| 80-89 | 0 (0) | 2 (9) |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 14 (64) | 11 (48) |
| Male | 8 (36) | 12 (52) |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| Black | 4 (18) | 0 (0) |
| Hispanic | 11 (50) | 23 (100) |
| White | 7 (32) | 0 (0) |
| Payer | ||
| Medically indigent | 1 (4.5) | 14 (61) |
| Medicaid | 11 (50) | 1 (4.5) |
| Medicare | 9 (41) | 7 (30) |
| Commercial/Denver Health Medical Plan | 1 (4.5) | 1 (4.5) |
Figure 1.Conceptual framework for patient interview themes and subthemes.
Patient and Family Themes and Subthemes With Exemplar Quotations.
| Theme and subthemes | Quotations |
|---|---|
| Hospital environments influence how patients perceive their care | |
| Importance of cleanliness of environment | “Nobody came to clean my room the whole weekend that I was there. For my whole stay. I thought that was awful because you know—without a clean room you’re bound to get infection. So I told my best friend and I guess he took care of it for me. I didn’t want to get nobody in trouble.” (patient 49) |
| Hospital rules, policies, and procedures affect patient perceptions of autonomy and contradict patient preferences | “The doctors are discussing your personal business and here, this person over here listening [referring to roommate]. Like oh, you know. That’s not good. Isn’t that a compromise issue of doctor and patient information? What if she knows somebody that doesn’t like me? You can put a whole bunch of stuff on Facebook.” (patient 23) |
| Whole person care that is patient-centered | |
| Importance of patient-centered care | “They actually come in and talk to you; you know the palliative care and the social workers and things like that. You actually see them before the medical team gets here in the morning. They send one of the people out and he gives you like an overview of what you’re going to be talking about. And then a little while later the whole team comes in so you’re not caught off guard about anything.” (patient 35) |
| Seeing the patient as human, taking measures to avoid dehumanization | “They treat you like you’re a person. Like you’re worthy.” (patient 14) |
| Treating patients with empathy | “Then when I was in the bathroom I called for some help getting out, and I didn’t really get the help I was looking for. I could tell she just didn’t want to do it. It is hit and miss. It all depends on who’s working that day and what their work ethic and personality is.” (patient 43) |
| Clear communication with patient and care team | |
| Communicating in a way that patients can understand | “First they talk among them, I don’t know the situation they’re seeing, everything, they come in, they talk to me, they listen to me lungs, they check up on me, whatever they must do, and sometimes among them they also talk a bit more, well, this is what will do, basically they consider this in group when the patient is there with them so that the patient will also know what’s happening, not just they come in and they say you’re going to use this blue drainer [references a medical device] and that’s it, go. They tell you, look, they’re going to give you this [references a medical device] for this and this and this reason. And we see this is the best thing for you but we also want to know how you feel about it. So they take you into account.” (patient 27) |
| Care teams need to communicate with each other | “I feel like it’s all communicated. I let them do the medical decisions, they’re smart. But they go over everything and the whole team comes. With the pharmacy, also three doctors come in here in the morning and they ask me. And we’re all on the same page with it. It’s so clear and I have an understanding of everything. It’s just real nice.” (patient 16) |
| Responsiveness and attentiveness | |
| Attention to patient’s physical and emotional needs | “The same way if it’s not ringing or not answering and you feel like you want to pee and you press it, nobody answers. You just have to keep on pressing it until somebody answers and I want to pee. I’ve peed myself already. I have to keep on pressing until somebody answers.” (patient 36) |
| Worthiness of care | |
| Past choices leading to blame and passivity in care | “Once he comes in the morning [referring to provider], I don’t like to bother him again. I know he’s got a lot of other patients worse off than me. I feel like I ain’t worth it sometimes…probably because of the life I led, the drugs I’ve done and the way I’ve acted and—up to no good and stuff I guess.” (patient 3) |
Figure 2.Diagram of focus groups’ themes and subthemes.