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Interior renovation of a general practitioner office leads to a perceptual bias on patient experience for over one year

INTRODUCTION: Measuring patient experience is key when assessing quality of care but can be biased: A perceptual bias occurs when renovations of the interior design of a general practitioner (GP) office improves how patients assessed quality of care. The aim was to assess the length of perceptual bi...

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Autores principales: Gauthey, Jérôme, Tièche, Raphaël, Streit, Sven
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5819831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29462196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193221
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author Gauthey, Jérôme
Tièche, Raphaël
Streit, Sven
author_facet Gauthey, Jérôme
Tièche, Raphaël
Streit, Sven
author_sort Gauthey, Jérôme
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Measuring patient experience is key when assessing quality of care but can be biased: A perceptual bias occurs when renovations of the interior design of a general practitioner (GP) office improves how patients assessed quality of care. The aim was to assess the length of perceptual bias and if it could be reproduced after a second renovation. METHODS: A GP office with 2 GPs in Switzerland was renovated twice within 3 years. We assessed patient experience at baseline, 2 months and 14 months after the first and 3 months after the second renovation. Each time, we invited a sample of 180 consecutive patients that anonymously graded patient experience in 4 domains: appearance of the office; qualities of medical assistants and GPs; and general satisfaction. We compared crude mean scores per domain from baseline until follow-up. In a multivariate model, we adjusted for patient’s age, gender and for how long patients had been their GP. RESULTS: At baseline, patients aged 60.9 (17.7) years, 52% females. After the first renovation, we found a regression to the baseline level of patient experience after 14 months except for appearance of the office (p<0.001). After the second renovation, patient experience improved again in appearance of the office (p = 0.008), qualities of the GP (p = 0.008), and general satisfaction (p = 0.014). Qualities of the medical assistant showed a slight improvement (p = 0.068). Results were unchanged in the multivariate model. CONCLUSIONS: Interior renovation of a GP office probably causes a perceptual bias for >1 year that improves how patients rate quality of care. This bias could be reproduced after a second renovation strengthening a possible causal relationship. These findings imply to appropriately time measurement of patient experience to at least one year after interior renovation of GP practices to avoid environmental changes influences the estimates when measuring patient experience.
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spelling pubmed-58198312018-03-15 Interior renovation of a general practitioner office leads to a perceptual bias on patient experience for over one year Gauthey, Jérôme Tièche, Raphaël Streit, Sven PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Measuring patient experience is key when assessing quality of care but can be biased: A perceptual bias occurs when renovations of the interior design of a general practitioner (GP) office improves how patients assessed quality of care. The aim was to assess the length of perceptual bias and if it could be reproduced after a second renovation. METHODS: A GP office with 2 GPs in Switzerland was renovated twice within 3 years. We assessed patient experience at baseline, 2 months and 14 months after the first and 3 months after the second renovation. Each time, we invited a sample of 180 consecutive patients that anonymously graded patient experience in 4 domains: appearance of the office; qualities of medical assistants and GPs; and general satisfaction. We compared crude mean scores per domain from baseline until follow-up. In a multivariate model, we adjusted for patient’s age, gender and for how long patients had been their GP. RESULTS: At baseline, patients aged 60.9 (17.7) years, 52% females. After the first renovation, we found a regression to the baseline level of patient experience after 14 months except for appearance of the office (p<0.001). After the second renovation, patient experience improved again in appearance of the office (p = 0.008), qualities of the GP (p = 0.008), and general satisfaction (p = 0.014). Qualities of the medical assistant showed a slight improvement (p = 0.068). Results were unchanged in the multivariate model. CONCLUSIONS: Interior renovation of a GP office probably causes a perceptual bias for >1 year that improves how patients rate quality of care. This bias could be reproduced after a second renovation strengthening a possible causal relationship. These findings imply to appropriately time measurement of patient experience to at least one year after interior renovation of GP practices to avoid environmental changes influences the estimates when measuring patient experience. Public Library of Science 2018-02-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5819831/ /pubmed/29462196 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193221 Text en © 2018 Gauthey et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gauthey, Jérôme
Tièche, Raphaël
Streit, Sven
Interior renovation of a general practitioner office leads to a perceptual bias on patient experience for over one year
title Interior renovation of a general practitioner office leads to a perceptual bias on patient experience for over one year
title_full Interior renovation of a general practitioner office leads to a perceptual bias on patient experience for over one year
title_fullStr Interior renovation of a general practitioner office leads to a perceptual bias on patient experience for over one year
title_full_unstemmed Interior renovation of a general practitioner office leads to a perceptual bias on patient experience for over one year
title_short Interior renovation of a general practitioner office leads to a perceptual bias on patient experience for over one year
title_sort interior renovation of a general practitioner office leads to a perceptual bias on patient experience for over one year
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5819831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29462196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193221
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