Using online patient feedback to improve NHS services: the INQUIRE multimethod study
- PMID: 31693328
- Bookshelf ID: NBK549391
- DOI: 10.3310/hsdr07380
Using online patient feedback to improve NHS services: the INQUIRE multimethod study
Excerpt
Background: Online customer feedback has become routine in many industries, but it has yet to be harnessed for service improvement in health care.
Objectives: To identify the current evidence on online patient feedback; to identify public and health professional attitudes and behaviour in relation to online patient feedback; to explore the experiences of patients in providing online feedback to the NHS; and to examine the practices and processes of online patient feedback within NHS trusts.
Design: A multimethod programme of five studies: (1) evidence synthesis and stakeholder consultation; (2) questionnaire survey of the public; (3) qualitative study of patients’ and carers’ experiences of creating and using online comment; (4) questionnaire surveys and a focus group of health-care professionals; and (5) ethnographic organisational case studies with four NHS secondary care provider organisations.
Setting: The UK.
Methods: We searched bibliographic databases and conducted hand-searches to January 2018. Synthesis was guided by themes arising from consultation with 15 stakeholders. We conducted a face-to-face survey of a representative sample of the UK population (n = 2036) and 37 purposively sampled qualitative semistructured interviews with people with experience of online feedback. We conducted online surveys of 1001 quota-sampled doctors and 749 nurses or midwives, and a focus group with five allied health professionals. We conducted ethnographic case studies at four NHS trusts, with a researcher spending 6–10 weeks at each site.
Results: Many people (42% of internet users in the general population) read online feedback from other patients. Fewer people (8%) write online feedback, but when they do one of their main reasons is to give praise. Most online feedback is positive in its tone and people describe caring about the NHS and wanting to help it (‘caring for care’). They also want their feedback to elicit a response as part of a conversation. Many professionals, especially doctors, are cautious about online feedback, believing it to be mainly critical and unrepresentative, and rarely encourage it. From a NHS trust perspective, online patient feedback is creating new forms of response-ability (organisations needing the infrastructure to address multiple channels and increasing amounts of online feedback) and responsivity (ensuring responses are swift and publicly visible).
Limitations: This work provides only a cross-sectional snapshot of a fast-emerging phenomenon. Questionnaire surveys can be limited by response bias. The quota sample of doctors and volunteer sample of nurses may not be representative. The ethnographic work was limited in its interrogation of differences between sites.
Conclusions: Providing and using online feedback are becoming more common for patients who are often motivated to give praise and to help the NHS improve, but health organisations and professionals are cautious and not fully prepared to use online feedback for service improvement. We identified several disconnections between patient motivations and staff and organisational perspectives, which will need to be resolved if NHS services are to engage with this source of constructive criticism and commentary from patients.
Future work: Intervention studies could measure online feedback as an intervention for service improvement and longitudinal studies could examine use over time, including unanticipated consequences. Content analyses could look for new knowledge on specific tests or treatments. Methodological work is needed to identify the best approaches to analysing feedback.
Study registration: The ethnographic case study work was registered as Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN33095169.
Funding: This project was funded by the National institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Services and Delivery Research programme and will be published in full in Health Services and Delivery Research; Vol. 7, No. 38. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
Copyright © Queen’s Printer and Controller of HMSO 2019. This work was produced by Powell et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This issue may be freely reproduced for the purposes of private research and study and extracts (or indeed, the full report) may be included in professional journals provided that suitable acknowledgement is made and the reproduction is not associated with any form of advertising. Applications for commercial reproduction should be addressed to: NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK.
Sections
- Plain English summary
- Scientific summary
- Chapter 1. Background and rationale
- Chapter 2. A scoping review and stakeholder consultation charting the current landscape of the evidence on online patient feedback
- Chapter 3. A cross-sectional survey of the UK public to understand use of online ratings and reviews of health services
- Chapter 4. Cross-sectional surveys of doctors and nurses to identify UK health-care professionals’ attitudes to and experiences of online feedback
- Chapter 5. Conversations about care: interview study with patients and their family members to explore their perspectives on and experiences with online feedback about NHS services
- Chapter 6. Responsibility, response-ability and responsivity: the new characteristics of accountability in the face of online patient feedback – ethnographic case studies in four NHS trusts
- Chapter 7. Patient and public involvement
- Chapter 8. Conclusions and implications
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1. Study Steering Committee
- Appendix 2. Survey of the UK public: questionnaire logic and text
- Appendix 3. Survey of the UK public: internet access demographics
- Appendix 4. Survey of the UK public: internet access frequency
- Appendix 5. Survey of the UK public: general characteristics of participants in detail
- Appendix 6. Survey of the UK public: social and health characteristics of participants in detail
- Appendix 7. Survey of the UK public: reading online feedback
- Appendix 8. Survey of the UK public: read or gave online ratings or reviews about the NHS, individuals or drugs
- Appendix 9. Survey of the UK public: wrote online feedback
- Appendix 10. Survey of the UK public: frequency of reading and writing online feedback
- Appendix 11. Survey of the UK public: reading versus writing feedback
- Appendix 12. Survey of the UK public: websites on which online feedback was read and written
- Appendix 13. Attitudes and experiences of UK health-care professionals: questionnaire text
- Appendix 14. Attitudes and experiences of UK health-care professionals: focus group topic guide
- Appendix 15. Attitudes and experiences of UK health-care professionals: online patient feedback on experiences of NHS care is generally negative
- Appendix 16. Attitudes and experiences of UK health-care professionals: behaviours in relation to online feedback on internet reviews and ratings sites
- Appendix 17. Interview study with patients and their family members: patient interview topic guide
- Appendix 18. Attitudes and experiences of UK health-care professionals: online patient feedback on experiences of NHS care is useful to help the NHS improve services
- Appendix 19. The INQUIRE publications and dissemination activities
- List of abbreviations
- List of supplementary material
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