马来西亚政府卫生诊所虚拟咨询服务的患者满意度和经验:综述。

Q3 Medicine
Medical Journal of Malaysia Pub Date : 2025-09-01
A K Nasim, I Khalid, M R Isa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:虚拟会诊(VC)已成为一种重要的医疗服务模式,特别是在COVID-19大流行的推动下。在国家数字卫生战略的指导下,卫生部已逐步在马来西亚的政府卫生诊所实施VC服务。随着风险投资成为初级保健不可或缺的一部分,评估患者满意度和体验对确保服务质量至关重要。尽管各种工具在全球范围内可用,但在马来西亚初级保健的背景下,特别是在马来语方面,仍然缺乏有效的工具。本叙述性综述旨在确定用于评估VC患者满意度和体验的现有工具,评估其相关性和心理测量稳健性,并突出测量中的差距,特别是马来西亚的公共初级保健。材料和方法:使用PubMed进行系统检索,采用综合检索策略,结合MeSH术语和与“患者满意度”、“患者体验”、“调查问卷”和“远程医疗”相关的文本词。搜索仅限于涉及成年人的英语出版物,并返回了876篇文章。应用免费全文过滤器后,筛选了397篇文章。标题和摘要筛选产生了83项可能符合条件的研究,其中只有8项涉及相关工具的原始开发或改编,并被纳入进一步分析。结果:在被纳入的七个研究中,大多数问卷主要集中在与可用性和可接受性相关的领域,如界面易用性、访问和便利性。然而,很少有工具涉及临床护理质量的核心组成部分,包括沟通、诊断信心、护理连续性和协调。此外,在马来西亚初级保健的背景下,没有一个审查问卷进行了完整的验证和可靠性评估。在马来西亚进行了四项研究;然而,这些要么缺乏健壮的验证过程,要么只关注可接受性。此外,没有马来语验证的工具或专门针对马来西亚政府诊所的文化和医疗保健服务背景量身定制的工具。结论:研究结果显示,在评估患者满意度和经验的VC在马来西亚初级保健显著方法学差距。现有的工具主要来源于侧重于技术可用性或服务可接受性的模型,对虚拟护理的临床维度的关注有限。远程医疗满意度问卷(TSQ)、远程医疗可用性调查(TUS)和服务用户技术可接受性问卷(SUTAQ)等工具提供了部分框架,但缺乏全面的验证或上下文适应。在马来西亚,虽然已努力开展风险投资相关调查,但这些调查没有得到充分验证,而且往往缺乏初级保健的特异性。此外,目前使用的工具并没有捕捉到SERVQUAL或Picker患者体验原则等框架所强调的更广泛的服务质量领域。随着风险投资服务在马来西亚公共医疗保健领域的扩展,迫切需要开发和验证文化上合适、语言上可访问、心理测量学上合理的问卷,以评估患者满意度和体验。这些工具必须将技术可用性和医疗保健服务的核心临床组成部分结合起来。这些努力对于指导质量改进和确保VC服务符合初级保健环境中患者的需求和期望至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Patient satisfaction and experience for virtual consultation services in the Malaysian government health clinics: A review.

Introduction: Virtual consultation (VC) has emerged as a vital mode of healthcare delivery, particularly accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic. The Ministry of Health (MOH) has progressively implemented VC services across government health clinics in Malaysia, guided by national digital health strategies. As VC becomes integral to primary care, evaluating patient satisfaction and experience becomes essential to ensure service quality. Despite the global availability of various tools, a lack of validated instruments remains in the context of Malaysian primary care, particularly in Malay. This narrative review aims to identify existing instruments used to assess patient satisfaction and experience with VC, evaluate their relevance and psychometric robustness, and highlight gaps in measurement, particularly for public primary care in Malaysia.

Materials and methods: A systematic search was conducted using PubMed, employing a comprehensive search strategy combining MeSH terms and text words related to "patient satisfaction," "patient experience," "surveys and questionnaires," and "telemedicine." The search was restricted to English-language publications involving adult populations and returned 876 articles. After applying the free full-text filter, 397 articles were screened. Title and abstract screening yielded 83 potentially eligible studies, from which only eight were found to involve original development or adaptation of relevant instruments and were included for further analysis.

Results: Among the seven included studies, most questionnaires were focused primarily on domains related to usability and acceptability, such as interface ease, access, and convenience. However, few instruments addressed core components of clinical care quality, including communication, diagnostic confidence, care continuity, and coordination. Furthermore, none of the reviewed questionnaires underwent complete validation and reliability assessment within the context of Malaysian primary care. Four studies were conducted in Malaysia; however, these either lacked robust validation processes or focused solely on acceptability. Additionally, no tools were validated in Malay or tailored specifically to the cultural and healthcare delivery context of Malaysia's government clinics.

Conclusion: The findings reveal a significant methodological gap in assessing patient satisfaction and experience with VC in Malaysian primary care. Existing tools largely derive from models focused on technology usability or service acceptability, with limited attention to the clinical dimensions of virtual care. Instruments such as the Telemedicine Satisfaction Questionnaire (TSQ), the Telemedicine Usability Survey (TUS) and the Service User Technology Acceptability Questionnaire (SUTAQ) offer partial frameworks but lack comprehensive validation or contextual adaptation. In Malaysia, while efforts have been made to develop VC-related surveys, these are insufficiently validated and often lack specificity for primary care. Moreover, tools currently in use do not capture the broader service quality domains emphasised by frameworks like SERVQUAL or Picker's Patient Experience Principles. As VC services expand in Malaysian public healthcare, there is an urgent need to develop and validate culturally appropriate, linguistically accessible, and psychometrically sound questionnaires to assess patient satisfaction and experience. These instruments must integrate both technological usability and the core clinical components of healthcare delivery. Such efforts are essential to guide quality improvement and ensure that VC services align with patients' needs and expectations in the primary care setting.

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来源期刊
Medical Journal of Malaysia
Medical Journal of Malaysia Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
165
期刊介绍: Published since 1890 this journal originated as the Journal of the Straits Medical Association. With the formation of the Malaysian Medical Association (MMA), the Journal became the official organ, supervised by an editorial board. Some of the early Hon. Editors were Mr. H.M. McGladdery (1960 - 1964), Dr. A.A. Sandosham (1965 - 1977), Prof. Paul C.Y. Chen (1977 - 1987). It is a scientific journal, published quarterly and can be found in medical libraries in many parts of the world. The Journal also enjoys the status of being listed in the Index Medicus, the internationally accepted reference index of medical journals. The editorial columns often reflect the Association''s views and attitudes towards medical problems in the country. The MJM aims to be a peer reviewed scientific journal of the highest quality. We want to ensure that whatever data is published is true and any opinion expressed important to medical science. We believe being Malaysian is our unique niche; our priority will be for scientific knowledge about diseases found in Malaysia and for the practice of medicine in Malaysia. The MJM will archive knowledge about the changing pattern of human diseases and our endeavours to overcome them. It will also document how medicine develops as a profession in the nation. We will communicate and co-operate with other scientific journals in Malaysia. We seek articles that are of educational value to doctors. We will consider all unsolicited articles submitted to the journal and will commission distinguished Malaysians to write relevant review articles. We want to help doctors make better decisions and be good at judging the value of scientific data. We want to help doctors write better, to be articulate and precise.
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