Secondary analysis of hospital patient experience scores across England’s National Health Service – How much has improved since 2005?
Kate Honeyford,
Felix Greaves,
Paul Aylin and
Alex Bottle
PLOS ONE, 2017, vol. 12, issue 10, 1-11
Abstract:
Objective: To examine trends in patient experience and consistency between hospital trusts and settings. Methods: Observational study of publicly available patient experience surveys of three hospital settings (inpatients (IP), accident and emergency (A&E) and outpatients (OP)) of 130 acute NHS hospital trusts in England between 2004/05 and 2014/15. Results: Overall patient experience has been good, showing modest improvements over time across the three hospital settings. Individual questions with the biggest improvement across all three settings are cleanliness (IP: +7.1, A&E: +6.5, OP: +4.7) and information about danger signals (IP: +3.8, A&E: +3.9, OP: +4.0). Trust performance has been consistent over time: 71.5% of trusts ranked in the same cluster for more than five years. There is some consistency across settings, especially between outpatients and inpatients. The lowest-scoring questions, regarding information at discharge, are the same in all years and all settings. Conclusions: The greatest improvement across all three settings has been for cleanliness, which has seen national policies and targets. Information about danger signals and medication side-effects showed least consistency across settings and scores have remained low over time, despite information about danger signals showing a big increase in score. Patient experience of aspects of access and waiting have declined, as has experience of discharge delay, likely reflecting known increases in pressure on England’s NHS.
Date: 2017
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pone00:0187012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0187012
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