EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT SATISFACTION - WHAT MATTERS MOST

被引:178
|
作者
BURSCH, B
BEEZY, J
SHAW, R
机构
[1] Department of Organization Effectiveness, Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program, Los Angeles, CA, Southern California Region
[2] Department of Emergency Medicine, Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program, Los Angeles, CA, Southern California Region
关键词
PATIENT SATISFACTION;
D O I
10.1016/S0196-0644(05)81947-X
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Study objective: To determine the relative importance of variables correlated with patient satisfaction with emergency department care and service. Design: Retrospective telephone survey targeting all patients who visited the Panorama City Kaiser Permanente ED from April 4 to April 17, 1991. Patients were contacted within one week of their discharge from the ED or hospital. Participants: Two hundred fifty-eight ED patients completed telephone surveys. Fifty-one percent of the respondents were male, and the mean age was 53 years. The majority of the respondents were white (70%); the most common service received was medical (82%). Measurements and results: Of the 14 variables that were found to be correlated with overall ED satisfaction, a multiple regression analysis revealed that the five most important variables were patient satisfaction with the amount of time it took before being cared for in the ED; patients' ratings of how caring the nurses were, how organized the ED staff was, and how caring the physicians were; and patient-satisfaction with the amount of information the nurses gave them about what was happening to them. Conclusion: The total time patients spend in the ED and patients' perceptions of their wait time for an ED bed are not as important to patient satisfaction as is receiving prompt and caring service. The above service variables are key areas that may be targeted to improve ED services.
引用
收藏
页码:586 / 591
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Patient-Reported Experience in the Pediatric Emergency Department: What Matters Most?
    Barbarian, Mher
    Bishop, Andrea
    Alfaro, Patricia
    Biron, Alain
    Brody, Daniel Adam
    Cunningham-Allard, Gabrielle
    Dubrovsky, Alexander Sasha
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PATIENT SAFETY, 2021, 17 (08) : E1166 - E1170
  • [2] Quantity, Quality, and Satisfaction With Mentoring: What Matters Most?
    Xu, Xiaohong
    Payne, Stephanie C.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CAREER DEVELOPMENT, 2014, 41 (06) : 507 - 525
  • [3] The Adult Student and Course Satisfaction: What Matters Most?
    Howell, George F.
    Buck, Jeffrey M.
    [J]. INNOVATIVE HIGHER EDUCATION, 2012, 37 (03) : 215 - 226
  • [4] The Adult Student and Course Satisfaction: What Matters Most?
    George F. Howell
    Jeffrey M. Buck
    [J]. Innovative Higher Education, 2012, 37 (3) : 215 - 226
  • [5] What matters, and what matters most? Exploring resident satisfaction in continuing care retirement communities
    Chaulagain, Suja
    Li, Jianwen
    Pizam, Abraham
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT, 2022, 34 (07) : 2472 - 2495
  • [6] GOING BEYOND PATIENT SATISFACTION TO WHAT MATTERS MOST.
    Bagley, Janet
    Murphy, Katie
    Gross, Anne
    Fraile, Belen
    [J]. ONCOLOGY NURSING FORUM, 2016, 43 (02) : 10 - 11
  • [7] Real estate student satisfaction in Australia: what matters most?
    Poon, Joanna
    Brownlow, Michael
    [J]. PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, 2015, 33 (02) : 100 - +
  • [9] What Matters Most in the Emergency Department: Examining Learner Understanding of Front-Line Older Adult Care
    Cooney, A.
    Rodriguez, M. Acevedo
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2020, 70 : S65 - S65
  • [10] A Qualitative Study of "What Matters" to Older Adults in the Emergency Department
    Gettel, Cameron J.
    Venkatesh, Arjun K.
    Dowd, Hollie
    Hwang, Ula
    Ferrigno, Rockman F.
    Reid, Eleanor A.
    Tinetti, Mary E.
    [J]. WESTERN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2022, 23 (04) : 579 - 588