The Patient Experience: Informing Practice through Identification of Meaningful Communication from the Patient’s Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
- Cinahl plus with full text (hits = 46)
- BMJ Journals online (hits = 47)
- Cochrane Library (hits = 69)
- Medline (hits = 3)
- Pro Quest Nursing and Allied Health Source (hits = 300)
- RCN Journal (hits = 35)
- Wiley online library (hits = 38)
- Google Scholar (hits = 96)
3. Methods
3.1. Aims
- (1)
- Examine the issues that influence the effectiveness of communication on patient satisfaction, experience and engagement, in an acute National Health Service setting, through identification of the patient’s requirements and expectations.
- (2)
- Explore the attributes of meaningful communication in an acute healthcare setting from the patient’s perspective.
3.2. Design
3.3. Sample and Settings
3.4. Ethics
3.5. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. The Friends and Family Test (FFT) Survey Results
4.2. The Friends and Family Test (FFT) Narrative Analysis
4.3. The Communication Survey Results
4.4. The Communication Survey Narrative Analysis
- 21 patients suggested that more staff were needed on the wards as they felt that the staff caring for them were too busy.
- 42 patients felt there was too little or inconsistent communication about their condition and/or hospital stay
- 22 patients described frustrations with delays resulting in a longer hospital stay after they had been told they could go home.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
7. Implications for Practice
- Developing an inpatient leaflet which explains the concept of shared decision making and why it is important. Provides an explanation that their knowledge about their health and lifestyle is as important as the clinician’s expertise with each complimenting each other.
- Creating a communication drive to encourage patients to ask questions providing suggested questions as examples on electronic posters, notice boards and hospital websites
- Introducing a paper at the bedside for question prompt lists to enable questions to be written down as the patient and/or relative thinks of them in preparation of ward rounds
- Exploring the use of the internet as a patient information tool to generate questions.
- Supporting clinicians to improve their communication skills—Develop a training programme for introduction of “teach back” methodology
- Promoting extended visiting hours to support more opportunity for communication.
- Ensure patient information leaflets are written to the recommended reading age to facilitate understanding by the majority of the population.
8. Recommendations for Future Evaluations/Research
- Conduct the evaluation for planned and emergency admissions separately to identify if there are any variances in results
- Repeat at ward level to identify examples of good practice for dissemination across the organisation
- Repeat with inclusion of demographic detail to identify if there are any variances in results.
- Repeat for individual demographic patient groups to identify specific communication strategies and needs.
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | How likely are you to recommend our ward to your family and friends if they need similar care or treatment? | Extremely likely | Likely | Neither likely nor unlikely | Extremely unlikely | Don’t know | Comments |
1151 | 261 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 0 | ||
2 | Do you feel your pain was kept under control? | Yes always | Yes sometimes | Not at all | Never had pain | Comments | |
1166 | 150 | 9 | 119 | 0 | |||
3 | Do you feel your privacy and dignity were respected? | All of the time | Most of the time | Some of the time | None of the time | Comments | |
1328 | 92 | 22 | 2 | 0 | |||
4 | Did you get enough help from staff to eat your meals? | Yes always | Yes sometimes | Not at all | Did not need help | Comments | |
761 | 45 | 7 | 630 | 0 | |||
5 | Were you involved as much as you wanted to be in decisions about your care and treatment? | Yes | Most of the time | Sometimes | Never | Not applicable | Comments |
1195 | 177 | 57 | 9 | 5 | 0 | ||
6 | Did you feel that you were treated with compassion? | All of the time | Most of the time | Some of the time | None of the time | Not applicable | Comments |
1285 | 122 | 23 | 1 | 13 | 0 | ||
7 | Did you feel you were involved in decisions about you discharge from hospital? | Yes definitely | Yes, to some extent | No | I did not need to be involved | Not applicable | |
1065 | 248 | 41 | 26 | 64 | 0 | ||
8 | Were you given enough notice about when you were going to be discharged? | Yes definitely | Yes, to some extent | No | Not applicable | ||
1086 | 241 | 34 | 80 | 0 | |||
9 | What was the best thing about your experience today? | Comments | |||||
584 | |||||||
10 | What one thing could we have done better? | Comments | |||||
169 | |||||||
The following link provides all the information and guidance about the Friends and Family Test https://www.england.nhs.uk/fft/ |
Question Number | Question in Order of Importance | Score | Importance |
---|---|---|---|
6 | Did you feel you were treated with compassion? | 96.08 | 0.52 |
7 | Did you feel you were involved in decisions about your discharge from hospital? | 87.82 | 0.34 |
5 | Were you involved as much as you wanted to be in decisions about your care and treatment? | 92.69 | 0.34 |
2 | Do you feel your pain was kept under control? | 93.65 | 0.32 |
3 | Do you feel your privacy and dignity were respected? | 96.75 | 0.30 |
8 | Were you given enough notice about when you were going to be discharged? | 88.73 | 0.29 |
4 | Did you get enough help from staff to eat your meals? | 96.36 | 0.23 |
Question Number | Question in Order of Importance (Patient to Staff) | Score | Importance (r) |
---|---|---|---|
11 | How much information about your condition or treatment has been given to you? | 99% | 0.48 |
12 | Has a member of staff answered your questions about the operation or procedure? (if applicable) | 97% | 0.46 |
14 | Afterwards, did a member of staff explain the operation or procedure? (if applicable) | 94% | 0.41 |
4 | Did you have confidence and trust in the doctors treating you? | 99% | 0.40 |
2 | When you have important questions to ask a doctor do you get answers that you can understand? | 99% | 0.40 |
15 | Do you feel you were given enough privacy when discussing your condition or treatment? | 98% | 0.40 |
13 | Have you been told how you will feel after you had the operation or procedure? (if applicable) | 88% | 0.35 |
3 | When you have important questions to ask a nurse do you get answers that you can understand? | 99% | 0.34 |
6 | Do doctors talk in front of you as if you weren’t there? | 93% | 0.29 |
5 | Did you have confidence and trust in the nurses treating you? | 100% | 0.27 |
9 | Does one member of staff say one thing and another say something different regarding your care? | 93% | 0.27 |
7 | Do nurses talk in front of you as if you weren’t there? | 95% | 0.21 |
8 | In your opinion, are there enough nurses on duty to care for you in hospital? | 80% | 0.20 |
Word | Word Count | Average Score | Negative Context |
---|---|---|---|
Discharge | 17 | 82.86% | 15 |
Waiting | 7 | 82.36% | 7 |
Communication | 11 | 81.74% | 8 |
Night | 15 | 70.34% | 10 |
Attribute | Word Count | Average Score |
---|---|---|
Professional | 23 | 98.40% |
Kind | 28 | 95.99% |
Friendly | 61 | 95.41% |
Caring | 65 | 95.22% |
Helpful | 61 | 94.58% |
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Grocott, A.; McSherry, W. The Patient Experience: Informing Practice through Identification of Meaningful Communication from the Patient’s Perspective. Healthcare 2018, 6, 26. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare6010026
Grocott A, McSherry W. The Patient Experience: Informing Practice through Identification of Meaningful Communication from the Patient’s Perspective. Healthcare. 2018; 6(1):26. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare6010026
Chicago/Turabian StyleGrocott, Angela, and Wilfred McSherry. 2018. "The Patient Experience: Informing Practice through Identification of Meaningful Communication from the Patient’s Perspective" Healthcare 6, no. 1: 26. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare6010026
APA StyleGrocott, A., & McSherry, W. (2018). The Patient Experience: Informing Practice through Identification of Meaningful Communication from the Patient’s Perspective. Healthcare, 6(1), 26. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare6010026