Measuring Patient Satisfaction for Quality Improvement
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Medical Care
- Vol. 37 (12) , 1207-1213
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005650-199912000-00004
Abstract
Surveys used for health plan quality reporting are generally administered annually to health plan enrollees to assess satisfaction with both the health plan and health care services. Therefore, surveys may lack sensitivity to measure the effects of patient-focused, quality improvement initiatives that could demonstrate results in a shorter time period. We describe the development and testing of a multidimensional, visit-specific measure of satisfaction with primary care that may be used in quality improvement. Conducted in five adult and pediatric primary care sites serving a commercial, largely managed-care population, the survey includes the Medical Outcomes Study Visit-Specific Questionnaire, the American Board of Internal Medicine Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire, and locally developed items. We assessed the instrument's reliability, validity, and utility for quality improvement. For both adult and pediatric samples, three factors emerged: satisfaction with the provider, satisfaction with access, and satisfaction with the office. Satisfaction with the provider and with the office were independently correlated with overall satisfaction in both samples; satisfaction with access was significantly correlated with overall satisfaction only for adults. For adults, patients who disenrolled from the health plan were less satisfied with the office compared with patients who remained with the health plan. Finally, for adults, we detected significant differences across practice sites in terms of satisfaction with office and access; for children, there were intersite differences in terms of satisfaction with provider, office, and access. We have support for the reliability and validity of this instrument that has identified differences in satisfaction between practice sites that may be used for quality improvement.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Satisfaction, Gender, and Communication in Medical VisitsMedical Care, 1994
- The Importance of Patient Preferences in the Measurement of Health Care SatisfactionMedical Care, 1993
- Patients' ratings of outpatient visits in different practice settings. Results from the Medical Outcomes StudyPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1993
- Older Patients?? Health Status and Satisfaction With Medical Care in an HMO PopulationMedical Care, 1990
- Regular Source of Primary Medical Care and Patient SatisfactionQRB - Quality Review Bulletin, 1989
- Satisfaction With Ambulatory Care and Compliance in Older PatientsMedical Care, 1982
- Patient Perceptions of Health Care at a University-Based Ambulatory Care ClinicThe Journal of Ambulatory Care Management, 1981
- The Concept of AccessMedical Care, 1981
- Significance tests and goodness of fit in the analysis of covariance structures.Psychological Bulletin, 1980