Teunis Teun, Thornton Emily R, Jayakumar Prakash, Ring David
Orthopaedic Hand and Upper Extremity Service, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 55 Fruit Street, Boston, MA, 02114, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2015 Jul;473(7):2362-8. doi: 10.1007/s11999-014-4090-z. Epub 2014 Dec 5.
Previous studies, predominantly in the primary care setting, identified time spent with the physician as an important predictor of satisfaction. It is unknown if the same holds true in hand surgery.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: Is patient satisfaction measured immediately after an office visit associated with the duration of time spent with the hand surgeon? What other factors are associated with satisfaction directly after the visits and 2 weeks after the appointment?
We prospectively enrolled 81 patients visiting our hand and upper extremity surgery outpatient clinic. We recorded their demographics and measured physical function, pain behavior, symptoms of depression, time spent in the waiting room, time spent with the physician, and patient satisfaction. Office times were measured using our patient ambulatory tracking system and by a research assistant outside the clinic room. To assess satisfaction we used items from the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey (a federally developed standardized survey instrument) relevant to our study. Two weeks later, 51 (64%) patients were available for telephone followup and the same measures were completed. Mean time spent with the hand surgeon was 8 ± 5 minutes and mean in-office wait time to see the hand surgeon was 32 ± 18 minutes. A priori power analyses indicated that 77 patients would provide 80% power to detect an effect size f(2) = 0.18 for a regression with five predictors. This means that we would detect time spent with the physician as a significant factor if it accounted for 7% or more of the variability in satisfaction.
Time spent with the hand surgeon was not associated with patient satisfaction measured directly after the visit (r = -0.023; p = 0.84). Longer time waiting to see the physician correlated with decreased patient satisfaction (r = -0.30; p = 0.0057). The final multivariable model for increased satisfaction directly after the office visit included shorter waiting time (regression coefficient [β] -0.0014; partial R(2) 0.094; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.0024 to -0.00042; p = 0.006) and being married/living with a partner (β 0.057; partial R(2) 0.11; 95% CI, 0.021-0.093; p = 0.002 [adjusted R(2) 0.18; p < 0.001]). Similarly, multivariable analysis found higher patient satisfaction 2 weeks after the visit to be independently associated with shorter waiting time (β -0.0037; partial R(2) 0.10; 95% CI, -0.0070 to -0.00054; p = 0.023) and being married/living with a partner (β 0.15; partial R(2) 0.12; 95% CI, 0.033-0.26; p = 0.012 [adjusted R(2) 0.16; p = 0.0052]).
Patient satisfaction among patients undergoing hand surgery may relate more to shorter time in the waiting room and to the quality more than the quantity of time spent with the patient.
Level II, prognostic study.
先前的研究主要在初级医疗环境中进行,发现与医生相处的时间是满意度的重要预测因素。在手部外科手术中是否同样如此尚不清楚。
问题/目的:门诊就诊后立即测量的患者满意度是否与与手部外科医生相处的时间长短有关?就诊后立即以及预约后2周,还有哪些其他因素与满意度相关?
我们前瞻性地纳入了81名到我们手部和上肢外科门诊就诊的患者。我们记录了他们的人口统计学信息,并测量了身体功能、疼痛行为、抑郁症状、在候诊室等待的时间、与医生相处的时间以及患者满意度。就诊时间使用我们的患者门诊跟踪系统并由诊室之外的一名研究助理进行测量。为了评估满意度,我们使用了来自医疗服务提供者和系统消费者评估调查(一项由联邦政府开发的标准化调查工具)中与我们研究相关的项目。两周后,51名(64%)患者可供电话随访,并完成了相同的测量。与手部外科医生相处的平均时间为8±5分钟,在诊室等待见手部外科医生的平均时间为32±18分钟。预先的功效分析表明,77名患者将有80%的功效来检测对于一个有五个预测变量的回归而言效应大小f(2)=0.18的情况。这意味着,如果与医生相处的时间占满意度变异性的7%或更多,我们将检测到其为一个显著因素。
与手部外科医生相处的时间与就诊后立即测量的患者满意度无关(r = -0.023;p = 0.84)。等待见医生的时间越长,患者满意度越低(r = -0.30;p = 0.0057)。就诊后立即提高满意度的最终多变量模型包括等待时间较短(回归系数[β] -0.0014;偏R(2) 0.094;95%置信区间[CI],-0.0024至-0.00042;p = 0.006)以及已婚/与伴侣同住(β 0.057;偏R(2) 0.11;95% CI,0.021 - 0.093;p = 0.002 [调整后R(2) 0.18;p < 0.001])。同样,多变量分析发现就诊后2周患者满意度较高与等待时间较短(β -0.0037;偏R(2) 0.10;95% CI,-0.0070至-0.00054;p = 0.023)以及已婚/与伴侣同住(β 0.15;偏R(2) 0.12;95% CI,0.033 - 0.26;p = 0.012 [调整后R(2) 0.16;p = 0.0052])独立相关。
接受手部手术的患者的满意度可能更多地与在候诊室等待时间较短以及与患者相处的质量而非数量有关。
二级,预后研究。