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- Deborah J Baldie, Bruce Guthrie, Vikki Entwistle, and Thilo Kroll.
- Centre for Person-centred Practice Research, Division of Nursing, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, UK.
- Fam Pract. 2018 Jan 16; 35 (1): 132113-21.
BackgroundPolicy encourages health care providers to listen and respond to feedback from patients, expecting that it will enhance care experiences. Enhancement of patients' experiences may not yet be a reality, particularly in primary health care settings.ObjectiveTo identify the issues that influence the use and impact of feedback in this context.Design And SettingA realist synthesis of studies of the use of patient feedback within primary health care settings.MethodsStructured review of published studies between 1971 and January 2015.ResultsEighteen studies were reported in 20 papers. Eleven studies reported patient survey scores as a primary outcome. There is little evidence that formal patient feedback led to enhanced experiences. The likelihood of patient feedback to health care staff stimulating improvements in future patients' experiences appears to be influenced predominantly by staff perceptions of the purpose of such feedback; the validity and type of data that is collected; and where, when and how it is presented to primary health care teams or practitioners and teams' capacity to change.ConclusionsThere is limited research into how patient feedback has been used in primary health care practices or its usefulness as a stimulant to improve health care experience. Using a realist synthesis approach, we have identified a number of contextual and intervention-related factors that appear to influence the likelihood that practitioners will listen to, act on and achieve improvements in patient experience. Consideration of these may support research and improvement work in this area.© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press.
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