Learning from patients: The impact of using patients' narratives on patient experience scores.

IF 1.7 3区 医学 Q3 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Ingrid M Nembhard, Sasmira Matta, Dale Shaller, Yuna S H Lee, Rachel Grob, Mark Schlesinger
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Enthusiasm has grown about using patients' narratives-stories about care experiences in patients' own words-to advance organizations' learning about the care that they deliver and how to improve it, but studies confirming association have not been published.

Purpose: We assessed whether primary care clinics that frequently share patients' narratives with their staff have higher patient experience survey scores.

Approach: We conducted a 1-year study of 5,545 adult patients and 276 staff affiliated with nine clinics in one health system. We used multilevel models to analyze survey data from patients about their experiences and from staff about exposure to useful narratives. We examined staff confidence in own knowledge as a moderator because confidence can influence use of new information sources.

Results: Frequency of sharing useful narratives with staff was associated with patient experience scores for all measures, conditional on staff confidence in own knowledge (p < .01). For operational measures (e.g., care coordination), increased sharing correlated with subsequently higher performance for more confident staff and lower performance or no difference for less confident staff, depending on measure. For relational measures (e.g., patient-provider communication), increased sharing correlated with higher scores for less confident staff and lower scores for more confident staff.

Conclusion: Sharing narratives with staff frequently is associated with better patient experience survey scores, conditional on confidence in knowledge.

Practice implications: Frequently sharing useful patient narratives should be encouraged as an organizational improvement strategy. However, organizations need to address how narrative feedback interacts with their staff's confidence to realize higher experience scores across domains.

向患者学习:使用患者叙述对患者体验评分的影响。
背景:人们越来越热衷于利用病人的叙述——用病人自己的话讲述护理经历的故事——来促进组织了解他们所提供的护理以及如何改进它,但证实这种联系的研究尚未发表。目的:我们评估经常与员工分享患者叙述的初级保健诊所是否有更高的患者体验调查得分。方法:我们进行了一项为期1年的研究,研究对象为5545名成年患者和276名工作人员,隶属于一个卫生系统的9个诊所。我们使用多层模型来分析来自患者的经验调查数据和来自工作人员的关于接触有用叙述的调查数据。我们考察了员工对自身知识的信心作为调节因素,因为信心会影响新信息源的使用。结果:与员工分享有用叙述的频率与所有措施的患者体验得分相关,条件是员工对自己知识的信心(p < 0.01)。对于业务措施(例如,护理协调),根据不同的措施,增加分享与随后更自信的工作人员的更高绩效和更不自信的工作人员的更低绩效或没有差异相关。对于关系测量(例如,患者-提供者沟通),增加分享与较不自信的员工得分较高和较自信的员工得分较低相关。结论:在对知识有信心的前提下,经常与工作人员分享叙述与更好的患者体验调查得分相关。实践启示:作为一种组织改进策略,应鼓励经常分享有用的患者叙述。然而,组织需要解决叙述性反馈如何与员工的信心相互作用,以实现跨领域的更高经验分数。
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来源期刊
Health Care Management Review
Health Care Management Review HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: Health Care Management Review (HCMR) disseminates state-of-the-art knowledge about management, leadership, and administration of health care systems, organizations, and agencies. Multidisciplinary and international in scope, articles present completed research relevant to health care management, leadership, and administration, as well report on rigorous evaluations of health care management innovations, or provide a synthesis of prior research that results in evidence-based health care management practice recommendations. Articles are theory-driven and translate findings into implications and recommendations for health care administrators, researchers, and faculty.
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