Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4299806 Journal of Surgical Research 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundHospital consumer assessment of health care providers and systems (HCAHPS) survey scores formally recognize that patients are central to health care, shifting quality metrics from the physician to patient perspective. This study describes clinical predictors of patient satisfaction in surgical patients.MethodsAnalysis of a single institution's Surgical Department HCAHPS responses was performed from March 2011–October 2012. The end points were top box satisfaction on two global domains. Multivariable regression was used to determine satisfaction predictors including HCAHPS domains, demographics, and clinical variables such as comorbidities, intensive care unit stay, emergency case, discharge day, floor transfers, complications, and ancillary procedures.ResultsIn total, 978 surveys were evaluated representing admissions to Acute care and/or Trauma (n = 177, 18.1%), Thoracic (n = 169, 17.3%), Colorectal (n = 107, 10.9%), Transplant (n = 95, 9.7%), Vascular (n = 92, 9.4%), Oncology (n = 88, 9.0%), Plastic (n = 49, 5.0%), and Cardiac (n = 201, 20.6%) divisions. Overall, 658 patients (67.3%) had high satisfaction and 733 (74.9%) gave definite hospital recommendations. Hospital satisfaction was positively associated with an intensive care unit admission (odds ratio [OR] = 1.64, confidence interval [CI]: 1.20–2.23, P = 0.002) and satisfaction with provider and pain domains. Factors associated with decreased satisfaction were race (non-black minority compared with whites; OR = 0.41, CI: 0.21–0.83, P = 0.012), self-reported poor health (OR = 0.43, CI: 0.27–0.68, P < 0.001), ≥2 floor transfers (OR = 0.50, CI: 0.25–0.99, P = 0.046), and postoperative complications (OR = 0.67, CI: 0.55–0.82, P < 0.0001). In addition, weekend discharge (OR = 1.76, CI: 1.02–3.02, P = 0.041) was associated with hospital recommendation.ConclusionsClinical course, particularly complications, impacts patient satisfaction. However, more important than what happens is how it happens, as evidenced by the much greater influence of surgeon and nurse–patient interactions. These results help inform future quality improvement and resource allocation.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Surgery
Authors
, , , , , ,