Willner Keith
Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.
West J Emerg Med. 2025 Jun 25;26(4):810-814. doi: 10.5811/westjem.18713.
The patient satisfaction survey is a controversial fixture of modern emergency care. Patients who are satisfied are more likely to adhere to the treatment plan and less likely to pursue legal action. However, the current surveys are susceptible to recall bias. This study uses an analysis of data collected in a separate study to assess how patients rated their physicians' care when asked key questions in person by a trained volunteer versus in the Doctors section of the Press Ganey (PG) survey.
This was an analysis of prospectively collected data obtained in a separate study evaluating how patients experience their emergency care when learners are present. Trained medical student volunteers administered the survey to a convenience sample of patients slated for discharge at a single, community, tertiary-care hospital emergency department (ED) for a total of 12 weeks between June-October 2022. We compared this with the hospital's PG data for the questions on which the survey was based.
A total of 625 patients were approached over the study period with 313 agreeing to participate (response rate 50.1%). There were 8,460 patients discharged from the ED during those times (overall rate 3.70%). During the contemporaneous PG study quarter, the ED received 266 responses during the shifts for which the study enrolled patients, of a total 8,460 discharged from the ED during those times (response rate 3.14%). All key questions favored the in-person survey vs mailed PG survey: "I felt informed" score 79.2 (262) vs 75.6 (265), P = .02; "I felt like my [doctor] took time to listen" 85.0 (261) vs 79.6 (266), P = .05; and "satisfaction with care team" 83.0 (263) vs 74.7 (265), P = .0013.
This study shows higher satisfaction scores with an in-person survey. There was also a dramatically improved response rate compared with mail in PG forms, suggesting less recall bias. An absolute 5-point difference in PG score could lead to a relative 30-point change in percentile rank. This was a limited, single-site study whose results are hypothesis-generating but suggest a new pursuit for administrations seeking to improve their scores and possibly better understand patients' experience of their care.
患者满意度调查是现代急诊护理中一个颇具争议的固定项目。满意的患者更有可能遵守治疗计划,且采取法律行动的可能性较小。然而,目前的调查容易受到回忆偏差的影响。本研究通过分析在另一项研究中收集的数据,来评估当由经过培训的志愿者亲自向患者询问关键问题时,与在Press Ganey(PG)调查的医生板块中询问时相比,患者如何对医生的护理进行评分。
这是对在另一项研究中前瞻性收集的数据进行的分析,该研究评估了有医学生在场时患者体验急诊护理的情况。经过培训的医学生志愿者对一家社区三级护理医院急诊科计划出院的患者便利样本进行了调查,调查在2022年6月至10月期间共进行了12周。我们将此与医院PG数据中该调查所基于的问题进行了比较。
在研究期间,共接触了625名患者,其中313名同意参与(回应率50.1%)。在此期间,急诊科有8460名患者出院(总体率3.70%)。在同期的PG研究季度中,在该研究纳入患者的班次期间,急诊科收到了266份回应,而在此期间急诊科总共出院8460名患者(回应率3.14%)。所有关键问题都显示亲自调查优于邮寄PG调查:“我感觉了解情况”得分79.2(262)对75.6(265),P = 0.02;“我感觉我的[医生]花时间倾听了”85.0(261)对79.6(266),P = 0.05;以及“对护理团队的满意度”83.0(263)对74.7(265),P = 0.0013。
本研究表明亲自调查的满意度得分更高。与PG表格邮寄方式相比,回应率也显著提高,这表明回忆偏差较小。PG评分中绝对5分的差异可能导致百分位排名相对30分的变化。这是一项有限的单中心研究,其结果具有假设生成性,但为寻求提高分数并可能更好地了解患者护理体验的管理部门提出了新的探索方向。