Understanding a few fundamentals of patient experience and patient satisfaction is an important component of implementing a successful and sustainable approach.
There is no single strategy, program or approach that will magically produce scores in the top quartile. Often we hear, "We are going to focus on doing this one thing (rounding, food, communication boards etc etc) well and we will be successful".
Indeed that area needs to be done well, along with many others. For a long term successful and sustainable approach, the recognition that many parts of the organization are going to need overhaul and improvement is a “critical” first step. Develop a total vision for your approach then prioritize efforts to implement.
"You cannot improve one thing by 1000%, but you can improve 1,000 things by 1%" – Jan Carlzon
Huge amounts of effort in healthcare are taken up gathering data. Don’t make your effort about gathering data to look at later; there is too much of that going on now.
Move away from data analysis as the primary function and move focus to taking action on issues.
If the banking industry processed data at the speed of healthcare, an ATM transaction would take a day.
Often we hear accountability for satisfaction is the sole responsibility of nursing. Yes, nursing plays a critical role, as do physicians, accountants, engineers, and executives. Ensure your strategy gets management of all areas consistently and proactively involved in patient satisfaction and experience efforts. The benefits in having all managers directly involved in patient satisfaction are multiple.
4. Service Recovery
Service failures will occur. Patients will be unhappy about their food. Visitors will complain about communication boards being out of date. Treatment times will be delayed. Stuff will go wrong. Yes, keep working and redesigning systems and training to make everything error free but have a very robust service recovery process in place.
It’s not that you won’t have service failures, you will. The question is, do you find them and respond immediately?
Many hospitals are watching their HCAHPS scores obsessively.
Always keep in mind it is just a scoreboard. If you take a quick glance and you are ahead, be happy but keep focused on playing the game well and improving. If you take a quick glance and you are behind, it's simply a reminder you need to play the whole game more consistently and better.
If you play tennis by just watching the scoreboard, you will know the score and certainly lose the game. Focus on playing the game well.
Every aspect of daily operations needs to work well. Here are some examples that demonstrate everyone impacts patient experience and satisfaction.
There seems to be a continuing desire inside healthcare to collect historical data on patient satisfaction. While there is some limited benefit from this information (outside of required HCAHPS scores) the vast majority of effort needs to be directed inside the continuum of care. If you cannot correct an issue at the time of discovery, it is too late. Do not make the contact about “How did we do?” Make the contact about “How are you doing?” Some key elements of this are:
Real time response to service failures will improve your patient experience and satisfaction results. Analysis and correction of systematic failures surfacing from this feedback will drive further improvements. Importantly, keep learning, responding, and watching changes in a real time environment.
“It’s what you learn after you think you know it all that really matters.”
- John Wooden
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