Patients With Health-Related Social Needs More Likely to Report Poor Clinic Experiences
Measuring patients’ care experience is necessary to understanding and improving health care quality and is a core component of patient-centered care. In this study, we test whether patient health care experiences differed between patients with and without health-related social needs, above and beyon...
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2021-04-01
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Series: | Journal of Patient Experience |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/23743735211008307 |
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doaj-2bbbbdec6066451c834db6cc67f576dc2021-04-10T00:04:29ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Patient Experience2374-37432021-04-01810.1177/23743735211008307Patients With Health-Related Social Needs More Likely to Report Poor Clinic ExperiencesMary Gray PhD0Kyle G Jones MSc1Bill J Wright PhD2 Comagine Health, Portland, OR, USA Center for Outcomes Research and Education, , Portland, OR, USA Center for Outcomes Research and Education, , Portland, OR, USAMeasuring patients’ care experience is necessary to understanding and improving health care quality and is a core component of patient-centered care. In this study, we test whether patient health care experiences differed between patients with and without health-related social needs, above and beyond demographic differences previously studied. This study relies on survey data from 2341 patients who visited 1 of 7 primary care clinics in Portland, Oregon, and surrounding communities during the latter half of 2018. Survey analysis reveal that patients with at least 1 health-related social need had greater odds of reporting staff not always answering questions, not getting all the care they need, not getting the information to manage care, not being treated with respect by their provider, and getting care being a hassle. The findings from this study suggest that patients with health-related social needs are not getting the holistic care they expect in their primary care clinics and find it a hassle to get care regardless of their demographic characteristics and insurance status. This study may help to inform how health care systems and clinics can best serve patients with health-related social needs.https://doi.org/10.1177/23743735211008307 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mary Gray PhD Kyle G Jones MSc Bill J Wright PhD |
spellingShingle |
Mary Gray PhD Kyle G Jones MSc Bill J Wright PhD Patients With Health-Related Social Needs More Likely to Report Poor Clinic Experiences Journal of Patient Experience |
author_facet |
Mary Gray PhD Kyle G Jones MSc Bill J Wright PhD |
author_sort |
Mary Gray PhD |
title |
Patients With Health-Related Social Needs More Likely to Report Poor Clinic Experiences |
title_short |
Patients With Health-Related Social Needs More Likely to Report Poor Clinic Experiences |
title_full |
Patients With Health-Related Social Needs More Likely to Report Poor Clinic Experiences |
title_fullStr |
Patients With Health-Related Social Needs More Likely to Report Poor Clinic Experiences |
title_full_unstemmed |
Patients With Health-Related Social Needs More Likely to Report Poor Clinic Experiences |
title_sort |
patients with health-related social needs more likely to report poor clinic experiences |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
Journal of Patient Experience |
issn |
2374-3743 |
publishDate |
2021-04-01 |
description |
Measuring patients’ care experience is necessary to understanding and improving health care quality and is a core component of patient-centered care. In this study, we test whether patient health care experiences differed between patients with and without health-related social needs, above and beyond demographic differences previously studied. This study relies on survey data from 2341 patients who visited 1 of 7 primary care clinics in Portland, Oregon, and surrounding communities during the latter half of 2018. Survey analysis reveal that patients with at least 1 health-related social need had greater odds of reporting staff not always answering questions, not getting all the care they need, not getting the information to manage care, not being treated with respect by their provider, and getting care being a hassle. The findings from this study suggest that patients with health-related social needs are not getting the holistic care they expect in their primary care clinics and find it a hassle to get care regardless of their demographic characteristics and insurance status. This study may help to inform how health care systems and clinics can best serve patients with health-related social needs. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/23743735211008307 |
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