Your Experience
in the Hospital and Why it Matters
By Carolyn M.
Clancy, M.D.
April 1, 2008
If you had
successful heart surgery at your local hospital
but went home without instructions about what to
do at home, you might think your hospital failed
to provide top-notch care. You would be right,
but you probably wouldn’t know how to voice your
concern.
Although
hospitals have asked patients what they thought
about their hospital stays, patients’ answers
have not been available to the public. Not
having this information has made it harder for
patients to decide which hospitals to use. It
has also prevented doctors, nurses, and hospital
leaders from knowing what they should do
differently to improve care.
Because patients’
experiences are an important part of good
quality care, I’m happy to tell you that this
information is now available for the first time
on a public Web site. You can go to the
Hospital Compare Web site and learn about
the care experienced by patients in about 2,500
hospitals around the country.
By the end of
this year, information from most of the Nation’s
hospitals will be available on the site.
The Web site
reports patients’ answers to more than two dozen
questions about hospital care, such as:
- How often
did nurses explain things in a way you could
understand?
- How often
did doctors listen carefully to you?
- After you
pressed the call button, how often did you
get help as soon as you wanted it?
- How often
did the hospital staff do everything it
could to help you with your pain?
- How often
did the hospital staff tell you what
medicine was for?
- How often
were your room and bathroom cleaned?
- How often
was the area around your room quiet at
night?
- Did you get
information in writing about what symptoms
or health problems to look out for after you
left the hospital?
- On a scale
of 0 to 10, what number would you use to
rate this hospital during your stay?
- Would you
recommend this hospital to your friends and
family?
My agency, the
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality,
developed this national survey. When we tested
it, my agency got feedback that made it clear
that doctors, nurses, and hospitals are doing
some things well. But there’s more work to be
done before quality can truly improve.
For example, a
majority (84 percent) of patients said that
doctors always treated them with courtesy and
respect. Nearly as many (77 percent) said nurses
always treated them in this same way. While a
basic right, treating patients respectfully and
courteously also increases the chances for open,
honest conversation between a patient and a
physician.
The survey also
found that 20 percent of patients said they
never received written information about health
problems to watch for when leaving the hospital.
For example, a patient who just underwent heart
surgery needs to know to call the doctor
immediately if a fever or rapid heart rate
occurs or if medicines that were prescribed to
prevent disease from coming back are causing
side effects or other difficulties. Having a
rapid heart rate or fever could mean the patient
has an infection, which is very serious if it’s
not treated quickly. Many patients stop taking
medicines after they leave the hospital because
they have a side effect or because they don’t
know how important it is to take these drugs to
completely recover.
We know that a
speedy response to a call button or a quiet room
at night does not mean you’ve received the best
quality health care, but they are both important
to patients. But we also know that when patients
are treated with respect and given information
they understand, they are likely to play an
active role in their health care.
That’s a goal
that I embrace. It’s also the reason why I’m
convinced that making this information available
to the public will help doctors, nurses,
hospitals, andmost importantlypatients. You
need to take an active role in your health care.
Using this Web site to pick a hospital is one
way to do that.
I’m Dr. Carolyn
Clancy, and that’s my opinion on how to navigate
the health care system.
AHRQ Resources
Hospital
Compare
Information for Consumers
http://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov/Hospital/Search/Welcome.asp?
Having
Surgery? What You Need to Know: Questions to Ask
Your Doctor and Your Surgeon
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/surgery/surgery.htm
Quick
TipsWhen Planning for Surgery
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/quicktips/tipsurgery.htm
Guide to
Health Care Quality: How to Know It When You See
It
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/guidetoq/
Current as of April 2008
Internet Citation:
Your Experience in the Hospital and Why it
Matters. Navigating the Health Care System:
Advice Columns from Dr. Carolyn Clancy, April 1,
2008. Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/cc/cc040108.htm
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