Do Press Ganey Scores measure Quality Care?

Nurses General Nursing

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Specializes in Cardiac, ER.

Found an interesting article,....While many of us have made these same observations, it is nice to see it being brought to light among professionals. Perhaps something will change,

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/821288?src=stfb%3Fsrc%3Dstfb%3Fsrc%3Dstfb

Nobody with half a brain has ever linked high patient satisfaction with improved outcomes.

People love Mcdonalds. That doesn't make it healthy.

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.

Uhm....no. Patients are upset over not getting all the narcs they want and are angry that they weren't fed when they are NPO...those surveys have LITTLE to do with the quality of care.

Specializes in Emergency.
Uhm....no. Patients are upset over not getting all the narcs they want and are angry that they weren't fed when they are NPO...those surveys have LITTLE to do with the quality of care.

"little to do"? Nothing in my opinion. Plus, when do you do a survey? When you're unhappy, that's when. Pretty much guarantees a skew to the negative.

Specializes in Neuro ICU and Med Surg.

Those surveys have absolutely NOTHING to do with quality of care. I refuse to fill them out when I get them. If I have a complaint I know who to go to. I have only done this twice. Once in regards of the care of my son at an urgent care where the nurse had extreme difficulty drawing up oral meds in a syringe (yes I mean extreme difficulty). Another time when a resident ticked me off in the way he was treating my grandmother.

Specializes in Nursing Professional Development.

While I definitely agree with the article, I don't think it is wise to "throw out the baby with the bath water." Some of the information obtained in such surveys is valuable. (e.g. Did people leave the hospital feeling like they understood their discharge instructions?) The problem with these surveys is that most people (including hospital administrators) don't know how to properly interpret or use the data they generate. They also don't always ask the right questions. (e.g. finding out if the patient would be satisfied only if they got that antibiotic or pain med.)

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
While I definitely agree with the article, I don't think it is wise to "throw out the baby with the bath water." Some of the information obtained in such surveys is valuable. (e.g. Did people leave the hospital feeling like they understood their discharge instructions?) The problem with these surveys is that most people (including hospital administrators) don't know how to properly interpret or use the data they generate. They also don't always ask the right questions. (e.g. finding out if the patient would be satisfied only if they got that antibiotic or pain med.)

I think that there should be major tweaking with the surveys...I think this should be relegated to nurses, personally.

When I get them, I do make an effort to fill them out; I want to ensure that the survey is given the most accurate piece of info, I want to ensure that the right "sense" is being applied; not sure I'm helping, but I try!

Specializes in ICU, LTACH, Internal Medicine.

The way Press Ganey survey exists, it has nothing to do with QUALITY OF CARE received per se. It measures SATISFACTION WITH TYPE OF CARE received, which may or may not have anything to do with quality. McDonald's was a good example of high satisfaction with low quality.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
The way Press Ganey survey exists, it has nothing to do with QUALITY OF CARE received per se. It measures SATISFACTION WITH TYPE OF CARE received, which may or may not have anything to do with quality. McDonald's was a good example of high satisfaction with low quality.

Which sensibly, should be measured only by the clinicans and what the pts report to said clinicans.

"Obamacare has budgeted $850 million in reduced Medicare reimbursement for hospitals with lower scores."

This is the entire crux of the article right here. Between key words, phrases, scripting, and other robotic foolishness in an attempt to give an elaborate illusion, there is little practice of nursing.

Specializes in LTC, med/surg, hospice.

With questions like, how often did you get help as soon as wanted when you pressed the call button...what do we expect?

Specializes in Critical Care.
With questions like how often did you get help as soon as wanted when you pressed the call button...what do we expect?[/quote']

This is one of the questions that I would think the nursing community is all for. The only way to do better on this question is for facilities to provide better staffing, what's wrong with that?

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