Scottish Inpatient Patient Experience Survey 2014 Volume 2: Technical Report

This report provides technical information on the survey design, sampling, fieldwork and analysis for the Scottish Inpatient Patient Experience Survey 2014.

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1 Introduction

Introduction

  • The Scottish Inpatient Patient Experience Survey is a postal survey, first conducted in early 2010, with the aim of establishing the experience of a sample of people aged 16 years and over who had a recent overnight hospital stay. The survey covers seven specific areas of inpatient experience: admission to hospital; the hospital and ward; care and treatment; operations and procedures; hospital staff; arrangements for leaving hospital; and care and support services after leaving hospital. A copy of the questionnaire can be found in Appendix A.
  • The inpatient survey is administered across all 14 territorial NHS Boards, and the National Waiting Time Centre (NWTC) and provides results for 44 individual hospitals as well nationally for Scotland.
  • This report provides technical information on the survey design, sampling, fieldwork and analysis of the 2014 inpatient survey. The latest results are available in the national report at: http://www.gov.scot/Publications/2014/08/4194

Scottish Patient Experience Programme

  • The Scottish Patient Experience Programme supports NHS Scotland in developing ways to use patients' experiences to inform service design and planning across the health service to drive improvement.
  • The Scottish Patient Experience Programme supports the Healthcare Quality Strategy for NHSScotland (or Quality Strategy) by providing a basis for the measurement of quality as experienced by service users across Scotland, in addition to support for local improvement.
  • The ultimate aim of the Quality Strategy is to deliver the highest quality health and care services to people in Scotland, and through this to ensure that NHSScotland is recognised by the people of Scotland as amongst the best in the world. Through the Scottish Patient Experience programme, people in Scotland are being given the opportunity to comment systematically on their experience of healthcare and its impact on their quality of life. The Scottish Inpatient Patient Experience Survey is one example of this work. There are also two other surveys currently being run through the Scottish Patient Experience programme: the Scottish Health and Care survey allows patients to comment on community services; and the Scottish Maternity Survey allows patients to comment on their experiences of maternity services. Further information on the Health and Care Survey and the Maternity Survey can be found at: http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/GPPatientExperienceSurvey and http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/maternitysurvey
  • Further information about the Quality Strategy can be found at: http://www.gov.scot/Publications/2010/05/10102307/1
  • The Scottish Inpatient Patient Experience Survey is jointly supported by Scottish Government, Information Services Division (ISD)[1], NHS Boards and Healthcare Improvement Scotland[2].

Aims of the Scottish Inpatient Patient Experience Survey

  • The survey's specific aims are to:
  • Gain a fuller understanding of the experiences of adult patients receiving inpatient services at NHS hospitals in Scotland;
  • Provide NHS Boards and NHS hospitals with feedback on the experiences of their patients, relative to previous surveys and other areas in Scotland;
  • Provide comparable national data on the quality of the patient experience across NHSScotland;
  • Provide information for the national performance framework indicator 'Improve the quality of the healthcare experience in Scotland';
  • Explore the variations in the experiences of different groups of patients.

Outputs from this survey

Contact

Email: Andrew Paterson

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