Publication | Closed Access
Examining the Role of Patient Experience Surveys in Measuring Health Care Quality
835
Citations
100
References
2014
Year
Quality Of LifeFamily MedicineHealth Care QualityPrimary CareClinical OutcomesPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHealth PolicyPatient SupportPatient Experience SurveysOutcomes ResearchSound InstrumentsQuality ImprovementHealth Care DeliveryNursingHealthcare QualityPatient SafetyPatient-centered OutcomeMedicinePatient ExperiencePatient SatisfactionSurvey Methodology
Patient care experience surveys evaluate the degree to which care is patient-centered. This article reviews the literature on the association between patient experiences and other measures of health care quality. Research indicates that better patient care experiences are associated with higher levels of adherence to recommended prevention and treatment processes, better clinical outcomes, better patient safety within hospitals, and less health care utilization. Patient experience measures that are collected using psychometrically sound instruments, employing recommended sample sizes and adjustment procedures, and implemented according to standard protocols are intrinsically meaningful and are appropriate complements for clinical process and outcome measures in public reporting and pay-for-performance programs.
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