1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a system and a method for patient evaluation of health care encounters, patient evaluation of the delivery of health care services by health care providers, and for evaluating patient satisfaction among various health care providers or among different departments in a health care facility so that health care providers can allocate resources for maximizing patient satisfaction.
2. Description of the Related Art
Many personal service professions and businesses periodically try to assess the level of consumer satisfaction with the services that have been received. These efforts typically involve a follow-up telephone call or questionnaire that is received by the consumer of the services several days after the services are performed. The telephone call or questionnaire typically is handled by a consulting company that receives the answers from the recipient of the service, analyzes the answers provided by the recipient of the services, prepares a report based on that analysis and delivers the report to the provider of the services. This typical approach has several drawbacks. First, the consumer typically is asked the questions several days or weeks after the service has been performed. The recollection of the consumer will fade as time elapses. Second, many consumers simply will choose not to respond, and hence surveys of this type have low response rates. Third, there is no certainty that the person responding to the inquiry is the person who actually received the service. Fourth, the service provider is at least one step removed from the raw data and hence has limited ability to consider the raw data or to adjust the algorithm that assesses the raw data to make the raw data more meaningful to the service provider. Fifth, the service provider generally is not capable of making real-time or close to real-time adjustments to these services based on the input from consumers.
The healthcare profession has become increasingly conscious of the importance of considering the input received from patients. However, the healthcare profession has been limited by the above-described methods for assessing consumer satisfaction. There are no commercially available systems or methods that enable providers of healthcare services to receive input from a patient while a service is being performed or immediately after the service is performed. There also are no commercially available systems or methods that enable providers of healthcare services to identify problems in a particular department of a hospital on a real-time basis or close to real-time basis so that problems can be identified immediately and addressed. There also are no commercially available systems or methods that provide a meaningful comparison of one healthcare facility to another healthcare facility.
US Patent Application Pub. No. US 2007/0179805 provides one attempt to address the above-described problems for assessing the level of care provided to a patient. However, the approach taught by US 2007/0179805 does not adequately address all of the above-described problems associated with collecting, analyzing and using consumer satisfaction data in the healthcare profession.
It is an object of the subject invention to provide an improved system and method for assessing patient satisfaction in a hospital or other health care facility and then to use that relevant data for improving the performance within and among healthcare facilities.
The invention relates to a system and method for assessing patient satisfaction at each of a plurality of locations in a hospital or other health care facility. The system and method are intended to encompass all health care encounters by recipients of health care services, including both inpatient and outpatient services. The system of the invention may include electronic data input devices that are made available to patients in a hospital or other healthcare facility. For example, the electronic data input devices may include tablet devices or other hand-held electronic devices that may be carried by the patient from one location to another in the hospital or other health care facility. Alternatively, desktop computers, laptop computers, tablet devices, or handheld electronic devices may be available at each location in the hospital at which patient satisfaction is to be assessed. The patient will answer specified questions at each location and that answer will be inputted via the data input device either directly by the patient or with the assistance of healthcare personnel at the specified location. The system will accommodate patient limitations, such patients with vision, speech or hearing impairments, wheelchair-bound patients and the like The inputted data will be transmitted immediately via either a wireless or wired communication system for real-time analysis and reporting to appropriate personnel in the hospital or other health care facility who can affect the quality of the service being provided.
The information collected from each patient initially may include demographic data, such as age, gender, income level and education level and geographic data. The collected information will be coded to identify the hospital or other health care facility and to identify the department within the hospital. The type of information gathered at each hospital or other health care facility preferably is the same to facilitate a meaningful comparison of patient satisfaction with respect to each of a plurality of different criteria. The data collected at a plurality of different hospitals and/or healthcare facilities will be analyzed and returned to each of the healthcare providers so that each hospital or health care facility can assess its own performance over time and compare its performance to other hospitals and healthcare facilities. The analysis preferably addresses each of a plurality of measures of patient satisfaction for each of the departments in each of the hospitals or other health care facilities. The measures of patient satisfaction can relate to the time spent during each phase of a healthcare encounter that is being analyzed, patient comfort while waiting during each phase of a healthcare encounter, clarity and timeliness of explanations given by healthcare personnel, pain, timeliness of medication, cleanliness of the healthcare facility, and such. Patients may be asked to rate each of these possible areas of patient satisfaction on a selected scale, such as a scale from 1 to 5. Each of the analyzed areas of patient satisfaction can be weighted based on a weighting system developed either by the patients or by the healthcare personnel. For example, pain management may be perceived as deserving a higher weight than time spent during admission. Additionally, the weighting applied to each of the analyzed areas of patient satisfaction may differ from one hospital department to another. For example, the time spent by a physician explaining treatment procedures and options may be weighted more heavily in the oncology department than in the orthopedic department. Weighting may initially be performed by the healthcare provider. However, consumer weighting may be carried out as the database grows sufficiently to avoid a skewed weighting effect that could result with a small sample. Consumer input will make the system more reliable over time.
The output can be sorted in accordance with any of the collected demographic or geographic data. Thus, the healthcare provider can determine if efforts to optimize patient satisfaction must be improved in one geographic location as compared to another or from one demographic group as compared to another.
The system and method of the subject invention enables accurate assessments of patient satisfaction to be collected promptly, analyzed immediately and reported to the various hospitals or other health care facilities and various departments of hospitals or other health care facilities in a way that enables performance to be assessed quickly and addressed efficiently, if needed.
One aspect of the method of the subject invention is illustrated by the flowchart in
The data preferably is collected by wireless electronic data input devices such as tablet devices, handheld electronic devices or the like, as illustrated schematically in
The collected data relating to patient satisfaction preferably is analyzed immediately and fed back to hospital personnel who are in a position to affect the way services are being performed. The inputted data preferably identifies the department of the hospital or other health care facility with which the patient is associated, as shown schematically in
Data can be collected from each of a plurality of hospitals and other health care facilities in a specified healthcare system or in a specified geographic area as shown schematically in
Each of the collected data may be given a weight. An absolute value for each aspect of patient satisfaction may be multiplied by a weighting factor. These products of the absolute value times the weighting factor then maybe summed to provide an overall measure of patient satisfaction in the respective department or in the respective hospital so that the departments, hospitals or other providers can be compared to one another. The weighting factors may be developed by hospital personnel or may be developed based on input from patients over time. The following table shows one possible report for a department or hospital.
The total numeric score can be associated with a more easily appreciated level of patient satisfaction. For example, the numeric scores can be associated with a number of stars, as set forth below.
The system described above will be perceived by patients as being accurate in view of the high percentage of patients reporting in the survey and the short elapsed time between the receipt of the service and the evaluation of the service. Additionally, the system and method described above will be appreciated by both patients and healthcare providers as a dynamic ranking system that would promote competition across hospitals and other health care facilities for improved patient satisfaction. Furthermore, the system and method of the invention provide a quantitative measure of performance and identify areas where improvement is appropriate, with all of these assessments and analyses being performed on virtually a real-time basis.
This application claims priority on U.S. Provisional Patent Appl. No. 61/748,986 filed on Jan. 4, 2013, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61748986 | Jan 2013 | US |