Determinants of Patient Satisfaction in a Private Practice Pain Clinic

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

drusso

Full Member
Moderator Emeritus
Lifetime Donor
Joined
Nov 21, 1998
Messages
13,137
Reaction score
7,722
Determinants of Patient Satisfaction in a Private Practice Pain Management Clinic

Authors
Anthony Dragovich,
Thomas Beltran,
George M. Baylor,
Marc Swanson,
Anthony Plunkett
Accepted manuscript online: 13 January 2017Full publication history
DOI: 10.1111/papr.12554View/save citation
Cited by: 0 articlesCitation tools
Article has an altmetric score of 28
This article has been accepted for publication and undergone full peer review but has not been through the copyediting, typesetting, pagination and proofreading process, which may lead to differences between this version and the Version of Record. Please cite this article as doi: 10.1111/papr.12554
Abstract

Background

Patient satisfaction is used to measure physician performance in hospital and governmental practice settings. There is limited understanding about factors affecting satisfaction in a chronic pain management setting for patients prescribed chronic opioids.
Objective

To identify the determinants of patient satisfaction and correlation to recommended outcome measures in a private practice pain management clinic.

Methods

We performed a 4-week quality assessment survey to define the determinants of patient satisfaction among pain management patients who were prescribed opioids. The data obtained from the survey were analyzed with descriptive and multiple regression analysis.

Results

Overall provider satisfaction was 96% and clinic satisfaction was 94% for a chronic pain population prescribed opioids for over 1 year. There was no correlation between provider satisfaction and functional outcomes. Only “level of stress” correlated with positive clinic satisfaction. The remainder of the functional outcomes were not correlated to satisfaction. “Listened to you carefully about your questions and concerns,” “Treated you with courtesy and respect,” and “Helped you with your problem” were found to be significant predictors of provider satisfaction.

Conclusions

These results indicate that a patient's perception of a provider's engagement and concern more heavily impacts perceived satisfaction than the patient's progress. A patient's perception of his or her clinic experience is heavily influenced by the attentiveness and coordination of the entire clinic care team. Staff attentiveness and coordination may affect a patient's level of stress. Adherence to current opioid prescription guidelines did not appear to have an overall negative effect on patient satisfaction.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
 
This is so true. When I first started out I was young and naive and thought I would be able to cure every ailment under the sun with an injection or procedure. I was very attentive to patients' complaints and always had another procedural option or idea if the previous procedure was unsuccessful. My patients loved me even when my RF's or ESIs failed b/c they felt that I genuinely cared and was trying. Unfortunately I'm no longer like that. I can't handle listening for more than 2min and I've come to realize at least 1/2 (not all like 101n thinks) of most pain is central and not amenable to a procedure or intervention. Less is often times more when it comes to treatment 🙂
 
Top