Versluijs Yvonne, Brown Laura E, Rao Mauna, Gonzalez Amanda I, Driscoll Matthew D, Ring David
Department of Surgery and Perioperative Care, Dell Medical School-The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
Department of Trauma Surgery, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands.
J Patient Exp. 2020 Dec;7(6):1211-1218. doi: 10.1177/2374373520948444. Epub 2020 Aug 13.
Patient experience measures such as satisfaction are increasingly tracked and incentivized. Satisfaction questionnaires have notable ceiling effects that may limit learning and improvement. This study tested a Guttman-type (iterative) Satisfaction Scale (GSS) after a musculoskeletal specialty care visit in the hope that it might reduce the ceiling effect. We measured floor effects, ceiling effects, skewness, and kurtosis of GSS. We also assessed factors independently associated with GSS and the top 2 possible scores. In this cross-sectional study, 164 patients seeing an orthopedic surgeon completed questionnaires measuring (1) a demographics, (2) symptoms of depression, (3) catastrophic thinking in response to nociception, (4) heightened illness concerns, and (5) satisfaction with the visit (GSS). Bivariate and multivariable analyses sought associations of the explanatory variable with total GSS and top 2 scores of GSS. Accounting for potential confounding using multivariable analysis, lower satisfaction was independently associated with greater symptoms of depression (β: -0.03; 95% CI: -0.05 to -0.00; = .047). The top 2 scores of the GSS were independently associated with women (compared to men: odds ratio [OR]: 2.12, 99% CI: 1.01-4.45, = .046) and lower level of education (masters' degree compared to high school; OR: 0.16, 95% CI: 004-0.61, = .007). The GSS had no floor effect, a ceiling effect of 38%, a skewness of -0.08, and a kurtosis of 1.3. The 38% ceiling effect of the iterative (Guttman-style) satisfaction measure is lower than ordinal satisfaction scales, but still undesirably high. Alternative approaches for reducing the ceiling effect of patient experience measures are needed.
诸如满意度之类的患者体验指标越来越多地受到跟踪和激励。满意度调查问卷存在显著的天花板效应,这可能会限制学习和改进。本研究在肌肉骨骼专科护理就诊后测试了古特曼型(迭代)满意度量表(GSS),希望它能减少天花板效应。我们测量了GSS的地板效应、天花板效应、偏度和峰度。我们还评估了与GSS以及前两个可能得分独立相关的因素。在这项横断面研究中,164名看骨科医生的患者完成了调查问卷,这些问卷测量了:(1)人口统计学信息,(2)抑郁症状,(3)对伤害感受的灾难性思维,(4)对疾病的高度担忧,以及(5)对就诊的满意度(GSS)。双变量和多变量分析寻求解释变量与GSS总分及GSS前两个得分之间的关联。使用多变量分析考虑潜在的混杂因素后,较低的满意度与更严重的抑郁症状独立相关(β:-0.03;95%置信区间:-0.05至-0.00;P = 0.047)。GSS的前两个得分与女性独立相关(与男性相比:优势比[OR]:2.12,99%置信区间:1.01 - 4.45,P = 0.046)以及较低的教育水平(硕士学位与高中学历相比;OR:0.16,95%置信区间:0.04 - 0.61,P = 0.007)。GSS没有地板效应,天花板效应为38%,偏度为-0.08,峰度为1.3。迭代式(古特曼式)满意度测量的38%天花板效应低于有序满意度量表,但仍然高得不理想。需要采用其他方法来降低患者体验指标的天花板效应。