Abstract
Objective:
To assess the relationships between patient experiences and two overall evaluations – satisfaction and service quality – in outpatient rehabilitation settings.
Design:
A cross-sectional, self-reported survey carried out in the year 2009.
Setting:
Three outpatient rehabilitation units belonging to Spanish hospitals located in Barcelona, Madrid and Seville.
Subjects:
Four hundred and sixty-five outpatients (response rate 90%) mean age 39.4 (SD = 11.9) years.
Main measures:
Self-reported experiences on aspects of care, participants’ perception of service quality, satisfaction with care, socio-demographic and health characteristics.
Results:
Satisfaction and service quality were highly correlated (rho = 0.72, P< 0.001). Two multivariate logistic regression models using satisfaction and service quality (with adjusted R2 31.5% and 37.1%, respectively) indicated that patients’ experiences and global rating of health improvement have more effect on those evaluations than socio-demographic characteristics. Mean satisfaction was 8.9 (SD = 1.2), and 88% of respondents described high service quality. However, nearly 25% of the respondents who reported high-quality evaluations also indicated a problem score of more than 50% in almost all aspects of care studied.
Conclusions:
Satisfaction and service quality provide a poor indicator of patients’ experiences. Both are two proxies but distinct constructs in rehabilitation care. Besides, not all problems encountered by patients are equally important to them.
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