了解一线工作人员如何利用患者体验数据改善服务:一项探索性案例研究评估

L. Locock, C. Graham, Jenny King, S. Parkin, A. Chisholm, C. Montgomery, E. Gibbons, Esther Ainley, J. Bostock, M. Gager, Neil Churchill, S. Dopson, T. Greenhalgh, Angela Martin, J. Powell, S. Sizmur, S. Ziebland
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引用次数: 18

摘要

英国国家医疗服务体系收集了大量关于患者体验的数据,但有人担心它没有利用这些信息来改善护理。这项研究探讨了一线工作人员是否以及如何使用患者体验数据来改善服务。第一阶段——对现有的全国调查数据进行二次分析,并对NHS信任患者体验线索进行新的调查。第2阶段——使用民族志观察和访谈在六个医疗病房进行的案例研究。对每个病房进行了基线和随访患者体验调查,并辅以深入访谈。在最初的学习社区讨论向患者学习和改善患者体验的方法后,团队制定并实施了自己的干预措施。人种学研究的新发现被形式化地分享。第三阶段-传播,包括为NHS工作人员提供在线指南。第一阶段——对英格兰所有153家急性信托机构的工作人员和住院患者调查结果进行了分析,并从患者经验线索中获得了57项已完成的调查。使用患者体验数据最常见的障碍是员工缺乏检查数据的时间(75%),其次是成本(35%)、员工缺乏兴趣/支持(21%)和数据过多(21%)。信托基金被分为几个指数的高、中、低绩效矩阵,为案例研究的选择提供信息。第2阶段——在每个现场,工作人员都使用一系列数据源进行质量改进项目。这些研究的数量和规模各不相同,它们直接利用患者经验数据的程度以及患者的参与程度也各不相同。患者体验前后的调查显示,在统计学上几乎没有显著变化。理解患者体验“数据”工作人员从一系列正式和非正式的情报来源进行了理解过程。调查数据仍然是最常见和最常用的数据形式。”软智能,如患者故事、非正式评论以及员工、患者和家人的日常病房经历,也被纳入员工的改进计划,但他们和更广泛的组织可能不会将这些视为“数据”。员工可能对使用它们进行改进缺乏信心。工作人员不能总是指出导致特定项目的患者体验“数据”的具体来源,有时还会报告他们认为需要改变的事情。员工体验是改善患者体验的途径一些网站关注员工的动机和体验,认为这将通过间接的文化和态度改变,以及让员工感到被赋予权力和得到支持来改善患者体验。工作人员参与者确定了几个潜在的相互关联的机制:(1)积极主动的工作人员提供更好的护理,(2)感觉受到重视的工作人员更有可能受到激励,(3)参与质量改进本身就是一种激励,(4)改善患者体验可以直接改善工作人员体验。”NHS环境中的“基于团队的资本”我们建议在NHS环境中将“基于团队资本”作为我们案例研究中的背景和观察到的结果之间的关键机制资本是指员工掌握各种实际、组织和社会资源的程度,这些资源使他们能够制定议程、推动流程和实施变革。这些不仅包括物质或经济资源,还包括地位、时间、空间、关系网络和影响力。由来自多个学科和资历级别的一系列临床和非临床工作人员组成的团队可以筹集更多的资金;当团队包括患者体验办公室的个人时,进展通常更大。第三阶段——与护理点基金会合作,为NHS工作人员制作了一份在线指南。这是一项民族志研究,研究了NHS一线工作人员如何以及为什么使用或不使用患者体验数据来提高质量。它并不是为了证明特定类型的患者体验数据或质量改进方法是否比其他方法更有效。制定和测试专门针对工作人员的干预措施,但以患者体验为结果,并包含健康经济学成分。专注于团队组成和多样性对以患者为中心的质量改进的影响和范围的研究。研究使用非结构化反馈和软智能。国家卫生研究所卫生服务和交付研究方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding how front-line staff use patient experience data for service improvement: an exploratory case study evaluation
The NHS collects a large number of data on patient experience, but there are concerns that it does not use this information to improve care. This study explored whether or not and how front-line staff use patient experience data for service improvement. Phase 1 – secondary analysis of existing national survey data, and a new survey of NHS trust patient experience leads. Phase 2 – case studies in six medical wards using ethnographic observations and interviews. A baseline and a follow-up patient experience survey were conducted on each ward, supplemented by in-depth interviews. Following an initial learning community to discuss approaches to learning from and improving patient experience, teams developed and implemented their own interventions. Emerging findings from the ethnographic research were shared formatively. Phase 3 – dissemination, including an online guide for NHS staff. Phase 1 – an analysis of staff and inpatient survey results for all 153 acute trusts in England was undertaken, and 57 completed surveys were obtained from patient experience leads. The most commonly cited barrier to using patient experience data was a lack of staff time to examine the data (75%), followed by cost (35%), lack of staff interest/support (21%) and too many data (21%). Trusts were grouped in a matrix of high, medium and low performance across several indices to inform case study selection. Phase 2 – in every site, staff undertook quality improvement projects using a range of data sources. The number and scale of these varied, as did the extent to which they drew directly on patient experience data, and the extent of involvement of patients. Before-and-after surveys of patient experience showed little statistically significant change. Making sense of patient experience ‘data’ Staff were engaged in a process of sense-making from a range of formal and informal sources of intelligence. Survey data remain the most commonly recognised and used form of data. ‘Soft’ intelligence, such as patient stories, informal comments and daily ward experiences of staff, patients and family, also fed into staff’s improvement plans, but they and the wider organisation may not recognise these as ‘data’. Staff may lack confidence in using them for improvement. Staff could not always point to a specific source of patient experience ‘data’ that led to a particular project, and sometimes reported acting on what they felt they already knew needed changing. Staff experience as a route to improving patient experience Some sites focused on staff motivation and experience on the assumption that this would improve patient experience through indirect cultural and attitudinal change, and by making staff feel empowered and supported. Staff participants identified several potential interlinked mechanisms: (1) motivated staff provide better care, (2) staff who feel taken seriously are more likely to be motivated, (3) involvement in quality improvement is itself motivating and (4) improving patient experience can directly improve staff experience. ‘Team-based capital’ in NHS settings We propose ‘team-based capital’ in NHS settings as a key mechanism between the contexts in our case studies and observed outcomes. ‘Capital’ is the extent to which staff command varied practical, organisational and social resources that enable them to set agendas, drive process and implement change. These include not just material or economic resources, but also status, time, space, relational networks and influence. Teams involving a range of clinical and non-clinical staff from multiple disciplines and levels of seniority could assemble a greater range of capital; progress was generally greater when the team included individuals from the patient experience office. Phase 3 – an online guide for NHS staff was produced in collaboration with The Point of Care Foundation. This was an ethnographic study of how and why NHS front-line staff do or do not use patient experience data for quality improvement. It was not designed to demonstrate whether particular types of patient experience data or quality improvement approaches are more effective than others. Developing and testing interventions focused specifically on staff but with patient experience as the outcome, with a health economics component. Studies focusing on the effect of team composition and diversity on the impact and scope of patient-centred quality improvement. Research into using unstructured feedback and soft intelligence. The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.
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