Medical patients’ assessments of their care during hospitalization

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess, from the patient’s perspective, selected aspects of the quality of inpatient hospital care in the United States. DESIGN: A cross-sectional survey, using telephone interviews of patients discharged from the medical services of a probability sample of 62 public and private, nonprofit, non-federal acute care hospitals in the United States. The participating patients reported: discrete, clinically important elements of hospital care; preferences for involvement in care; health status; sociodemographic characteristics; and overall satisfaction with their hospitalization. PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS: 2,839 patients drawn as a probability sample. INTERVENTIONS: None MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: For 32 of the 50 questions about potential problems encountered during hospitalization, at least 10% of the patients gave a response indicating a problem. One-third of the patients having a physician (31.8%) reported that that physician did not care for them during hospitalization. Other frequently reported problems included not receiving information about the hospital routine (45.1%), not being told whom to ask for help (33.9%), having pain that could have been relieved by more prompt attention (19.9%), and not being given adequate information and guidance about activities and care after discharge from the hospital (21.4–36.1%). Most patients preferred to be informed about important aspects of their care (94.7%), but their preferences for involvement in care varied widely. CONCLUSIONS: Information from hospitalized medical patients identified several areas of concern that should be the focus of attention and could lead to systematic restructuring of hospital-based care.