Narrative comments about pediatric inpatient experiences yield substantial information beyond answers to closed-ended CAHPS survey questions
Male
Adult
Patient experience
330
Adolescent
8.1 Organisation and delivery of services
Nursing
Hospitalized
Pediatric care
Article
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Health Services and Systems
Surveys and Questionnaires
Health Sciences
Humans
Quality improvement
Child
Preschool
Narrative comment data
Pediatric
Inpatients
Narration
Inpatient care
Paediatrics
Hospitals
Good Health and Well Being
Patient Satisfaction
Health Care Surveys
Female
DOI:
10.1016/j.pedn.2024.02.016
Publication Date:
2024-03-02T03:42:56Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Adults' comments on patient experience surveys explain variation in provider ratings, with negative comments providing more actionable information than positive comments. We investigate if narrative comments on the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS®) survey of inpatient pediatric care (Child HCAHPS) account for global perceptions of the hospital beyond that explained by reports about specific aspects of care.We analyzed 545 comments from 927 Child HCAHPS surveys completed by parents and guardians of hospitalized children with at least a 24-h hospital stay from July 2017 to December 2020 at an urban children's hospital. Comments were coded for valence (positive/negative/mixed) and actionability and used to predict Overall Hospital Rating and Willingness to Recommend the Hospital along with Child HCAHPS composite scores.Comments were provided more often by White and more educated respondents. Negative comments and greater actionability of comments were significantly associated with Child HCAHPS global rating measures, controlling for responses to closed-ended questions, and child and respondent characteristics. Each explained an additional 8% of the variance in respondents' overall hospital ratings and an additional 5% in their willingness to recommend the hospital.Child HCAHPS narrative comment data provide significant additional information about what is important to parents and guardians during inpatient pediatric care beyond closed-ended composites.Quality improvement efforts should include a review of narrative comments alongside closed-ended responses to help identify ways to improve inpatient care experiences. To promote health equity, comments should be encouraged for racial-and-ethnic minority patients and those with less educational attainment.
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