A Missed Opportunity to Improve Patient Satisfaction? Patient Perceptions of Inpatient Communication With Their Primary Care Physician

Improving patient satisfaction is a major focus of hospitals. Patient satisfaction could be driven by patient perception of hospital team communication with their primary care physician (PCP). A retrospective mixed methods approach was used to characterize the relationship between patient satisfaction and patient perception of hospital team–PCP communication. Data were obtained through general medicine inpatient and postdischarge interviews, oversampling "vulnerable elders," and a faxed PCP survey. Among 1044 patients and their PCPs, 22.3% of PCPs were not aware of their patient’s hospitalization. Among PCPs who reported that communication did not occur, half (49.2%) of their patients thought communication had occurred, implying a lack of patient awareness of discontinuity of care and possibly impeding safety. Patients who perceived that communication occurred were more satisfied with care (70.0% vs 53.1%, P < .001). Therefore, hospitals could potentially improve patient safety and satisfaction by seizing a missed opportunity to improve patient awareness of communication.
Source: American Journal of Medical Quality - Category: Health Management Authors: Tags: Articles Source Type: research
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