MakeMedicineBetter.org
Login  |  Register

Share your ideas

There's a million ways to make medicine better and we want to hear them all. From the political arena of health care reform, to the personal world of what you want and need medicine to be, Share Your Ideas is where you talk and we listen. So, if you have an idea, a question, or advice on what the world of medicine needs to do in order to be better, please share it. And check back often to see if it becomes reality.
Welcome, Guest
LOG IN
TO SHARE
YOUR IDEAS
REGISTER
Categories
Similar Ideas
Archives

REALLY ANNOYING PATIENT SATISFACTION SURVEY FROM PRC

SUSIE EATON | MARCH 08, 2010 | BEING A PATIENT
Bookmark and Share
Telephone survey is way too many questions. Twenty five questions! and after EACH ONE the same instruction " Based on your experience, would you rate your care as Excellent, Very Good, Good, Fair or Poor". Someone who can't remember the instructions they just heard 10 seconds ago probably can't participate in a survey very well anyway. It doesn't matter that BJC is happy with their survey tool and has used it for years, it doesn't matter that the interviewer follows the established protocol......it matters that the survey is annoying, patronizing and leaves a happy patient less happy than they were BEFORE they got the survey call. Please shorten the survey to about 10 questions and stop the repetious instructions!
Frances Whitman
03/09/2010 09:50:41 AM
Surely there are better ways to survey patient satisfaction than a post visit phone call! Many times, these surveys are the only opportunity for a patient to voice a complaint or concern about their care. Wouldn't it be a better idea to ask me these questions while I'm in the hospital? With all of the new technology these days, the surveys could be conducted in real time and any issues could be addressed immediately.
Jason Vander Weele
03/12/2010 01:57:11 PM
Susie,

I agree. Survey design is an art - not a science. I think too frequently we see organizations using tools in a certain way because it is the way its always been. An easy way your specific issue could have been solved would be to ask, at the very beginning of the survey, "Do you wish to hear the instructions once? or for each question?". That puts the control and responsibility for completing the survey properly in the patient's hand - not in the hands of the analyst.

I think these tools should use focus groups before going live, and also I think the analysts should be required to have test calls sent out to their homes, so they can understand what it is like to have to answer all those questions at home, with other things going on.

Context is important.
Copyright © 1997-2009
BJC HealthCare
All Rights Reserved
Search | About BJC | Help for Your Health | Check Your Disease Risk | myHealthFolders.com
Quality | Our Policies | Contact Us | BJC HealthCare | Community Benefit Report | Sitemap
BJC HealthCare | 4444 Forest Park Avenue | St. Louis, Missouri 63108 USA | phone -- 314.747.WEBB