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Patient experience of hospital care in China: major findings from the Chinese Patient Experience Questionnaire Survey (2016–2018)

Authors :
Linlin Hu
Pengyu Zhao
Li Luo
Jing Guo
Jing Ma
Jack Needleman
Yin Chen
Huixuan Zhou
Guangyu Hu
Jing Sun
Shichao Wu
Zijuan Wang
Yuanli Liu
Ying Mao
Qiannan Liu
Shiyang Liu
Source :
BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2019.

Abstract

ObjectivesChina launched the National Healthcare Improvement Initiative (NHII) in 2015 to improve patient experiences in healthcare. This study aimed to generate evidence of hospital care quality from the patients’ perspective.DesignThis nationwide cross-sectional study interviewed participants from 31 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions across China.SettingA total of 117 tertiary hospitals in mainland China.Participants48 422 responses from outpatients and 35 957 responses from inpatients were included in this study.Primary outcome measureThe scores of six predefined domains in the Chinese Patient Experience Questionnaire, five of which were designed to reflect specific dimensions of care, and one of which indicated the overall rating.ResultsMore than 80% of the respondents viewed their care experiences as positive. The NHII seems to have had a positive impact, as indicated by the steady, although unremarkable, increase in the patient experience scores over the 2016–2018 period. The Chinese patients generally reported a positive experience with the clinical aspects of care, but reported a less positive experience with the environmental, interpersonal and social services aspects of care. The institutional factors, including region and type of hospital, and personal factors, such as gender, age, education and occupation, were factors affecting the patient experience in China. Humanistic care was the aspect of care with the greatest association with the overall patient experience rating in both the outpatient and inpatient settings.ConclusionsThe national survey indicated an overall positive patient perspective of care in China. Older age, higher education level and formal employment status were found to be correlated with positive care experiences, as were higher levels of economic development of the region, a more generous insurance benefits package and a higher degree of coordinated care. The interpersonal-related initiatives had substantial roles in the improvement of the patient experience. In the regions where farmers and users of traditional Chinese medicine services constitute a greater proportion of the population, improvement of patient experiences for these groups deserves special policy attention.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
9
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dba31baa8bce0309298ce0f1b1a1cd9b