4.4 Article

Directing Improvements in Primary Care Patient Experience through Analysis of Service Quality

Journal

HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
Volume 53, Issue 6, Pages 4647-4666

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1475-6773.12985

Keywords

Patient experience; service quality; GP practice

Funding

  1. University of the West of England (UWE)
  2. Bath Spa University
  3. Plymouth University

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Objective Data Sources/Study Setting To examine the influence of dimensions of service quality on patient experience of primary care. Data from the national GP Patient Survey in England 2014/15, with responses from 858,351 patients registered at 7,918 practices. Study Design Data Collection/Extraction Methods Expert panel and principal component analysis helped identify relevant dimensions of service quality. Regression was then used to examine the relationships between these dimensions and reported patient experience. Aggregated scores for each practice were used, comprising the proportion of positive responses to each element of the study. Principal Findings Conclusions Of eight service quality dimensions identified, six have statistically significant impacts on patient experience but only two have large effects. Patient experience is highly influenced by practice responsiveness and the interactions with the physician. Other dimensions have small or even slightly negative influence. Service quality provided by nurses has negligible effect on patient experience. To improve patient experience in primary health care, efforts should focus on practice responsiveness and interactions with the physician. Other areas have little influence over patient experience. This suggests a gap in patients' perspectives on health care, which has policy implications for patient education.

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