Patient Satisfaction in the Critical Care Unit: A Qualitative Phenomenological Study
Recruitment status was Recruiting
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Purpose
To explore issues patient experience and satisfaction with a sample of patients recently discharged from critical care.
| Condition |
|---|
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Patient Satisfaction in the Critical Care Unit |
| Study Type: | Observational |
| Study Design: | Observational Model: Cohort Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional |
| Official Title: | Patient Satisfaction in the Critical Care Unit: A Qualitative Phenomenological Study |
| Estimated Enrollment: | 8 |
| Study Start Date: | February 2009 |
| Estimated Study Completion Date: | April 2010 |
| Estimated Primary Completion Date: | April 2010 (Final data collection date for primary outcome measure) |
Patients' perceptions of their medical care are of increasing importance to educators, researchers, and clinicians. The emphasis on patient experience and satisfaction is consistent with the trend towards holding health care professionals accountable to their consumers. Our understanding and advancement of patients' experience and satisfaction with care forms a pivotal role in ensuring individuals engage with healthcare services, adhere to therapies, and maintain ongoing relationships with providers. Experiences are best explored using interview techniques such as phenomenological interviewing. In our study we propose to use a hermeneutic phenomenological approach. Phenomenology is a way of qualitatively exploring a person's experience and their personal meanings from those experiences. It is an approach that considers the structure of a person's subjective experience and explores areas that might be hidden. A phenomenological approach looks for patterns that are shared by particular instances or experiences. The evaluation of patient satisfaction and experience is based on valuing patients' subjective perception of an experience. In our study, a phenomenological approach will generate a comprehensive description of a phenomenon or lived experience (i.e. stay in the Critical Care Unit). We will interview a sample of patients to explore experiences and to gain their meanings of their stay in critical care. This will hopefully lead to thinking around ways of improving patient experiences, satisfaction and care.
Eligibility| Ages Eligible for Study: | 18 Years and older |
| Genders Eligible for Study: | Both |
| Accepts Healthy Volunteers: | No |
| Sampling Method: | Non-Probability Sample |
Cancer patients who were admitted to the Critical Care Unit at the Royal Marsden Hospital
Inclusion Criteria:
- Cancer patients who were admitted to the Critical Care Unit at the Royal Marsden Hospital
- Patients who are not now at the End of Life or palliative.
- Adults (i.e. patients >18 years of age.
- Patients staying more than 24 hours.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Very short stay patients (<24 hours)
Contacts and Locations| Contact: Natalie Pattison | 02086426011 ext 1154 | natalie.pattison@rmh.nhs.uk |
| United Kingdom | |
| Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust | Recruiting |
| Sutton, Surrey, United Kingdom, SM2 5PT | |
| Principal Investigator: | Natalie Pattison | Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust |
More Information
No publications provided
| Responsible Party: | Natalie Pattison, Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust |
| ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT01007162 History of Changes |
| Other Study ID Numbers: | CCR3181 |
| Study First Received: | November 2, 2009 |
| Last Updated: | November 2, 2009 |
| Health Authority: | United Kingdom: Research Ethics Committee |
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on May 23, 2013