Friends and Family Test (FFT) -single question ‘would you recommend…’ The Adult National Inpatient Survey (AIPS) - AIPS uses validated questions based on the Picker survey carried out annually by every hospital and results published by CQC - Survey is posted to the patient after discharge - retrospective - Potential bias of respondents - provides no feedback to teams or wards Local schemes – may not be validated
Bell et al Good patient experience can independently improve clinical outcomes and safety Sullivan et al Identified the relevant questions from AIPS applying to AMUs -Established the national average (NA) for each question and compared AMU scores to other wards and specialties RCP Future hospital Commission recommendations
Series of recommendations considered to be best practice ‘Embed patient experience in service design and delivery’ ‘Develop mechanisms for measuring patient experience on an ongoing, structured and real-time basis, and publish the results in the public domain’ ‘Patient experience: The patient should be the definitive focus of healthcare delivery’
Measure the patient experience on an Acute Medical Ward using a validated questionnaire Assess it’s ease of use and ability to identify areas for improvement To assess the advantages and limitations of this questionnaire on an Acute Medical ward Comply with RCP recommendations Compare results with national data QI project
Conducted on Grantham and District’s 28 bedded AMU (~15 admissions/day) Used the AIPS validated questions from the Sullivan paper 22 validated questions in 4 domains: - Doctors - Nurses - Medication and discharge - Overall impression and comments section PALs department volunteer ‘Fresh’ data obtained at the point of discharge Compared with local and national data
Included Medical patients Admitted AND discharged from unit Excluded Cognitive impairment Severe psychiatric disorder Patients transferred from another hospital or transferred to a ward
3 week period in May 2015 32 responses – 100% return rate M=F ratio Age range Median length of stay 2-3 days Included weekday and weekend discharges
100% of patient felt treated with respect and dignity (NA* 76%) 100% had trust in the doctors and nurses (NA* 74%) 95% rated the unit good or excellent 18 questions scored equal to or higher than NA *NA refers to national average scores published by Sullivan et al 2013.
63% given sufficient information about their treatment (*NA 74%) 56% of patients felt they were given clear printed information about their medications (*NA 62%) 19% of patients felt the nurses spoke over them (*NA 19%) *NA refers to national average scores published by Sullivan et al 2013.
Validated questionnaire Results directly relate to the care individuals and teams deliver Individual consultants and senior nurses can directly monitor their own and teams performance Allows direct targeting to improve areas of concern Easy to use on any AMU Tool which could explore other aspects of care (eg. Measure weekday vs weekend experience )
Small survey Volunteers may have administered survey prior to ‘completed discharge’ which can affect results Comparison data was done by post after hospital discharge and there may have been a selection bias
We used a validated questionnaire to measure the patient experience on an Acute Medical ward The questionnaire was easy to implement and analyse with minimal resources The questionnaire identified areas of good practice and areas of concern It allowed results to be compared to local and national data
Royal college of physicians future hospital commission – March 2012, published January 2013 Care quality commission national inpatient survey 2014/15 ULHT data published online Sullivan, p; patient experience: what does it mean for an acute medicine consultant?, J R coll physicians edinb, 2013; 43(suppl 20):12-15 Sullivan et al the quality of patient experience of short stay acute medicial admissions: finidings of the adult inpatient survey in England. Clinical medicine 2013; vol 13 no 6: Doyle C, Lennox L, Bell D. A systematic review of evidence on the links between patient experience and clinical safety and effectiveness. BMJ Open 2013;3:e Reeves R, Coulter A, Jenkinson C et al. Development and pilot testing of questionnaires for use in the acute NHS trust inpatient survey programme. Oxford: NHS Surveys, DevelopmentInpatientQuestionnaire.pdf [Accessed 7 June 2013]. Cleary PD, Edgman-Levitan S, Roberts M et al. Patients evaluate their hospital care: a national survey. Health Aff (Millwood) 1991;10:254–67.
Presentations to medical and nursing staff with follow up presentations to reaffirm message Poster Campaign ‘GrEAT Wardround’ Tried to introduce a new discharge summary checklist that encompassed a lot of the information patient stated they didn’t get on discharge