Patients’ satisfaction with government health care and services in the Taung district, North West Province

This was a descriptive study that determined patients’ satisfaction with health care in the Taung district state health institutions, North West Province. One hospital, three health centres and five clinics were randomly selected, and consecutive patients were recruited at outpatients during 17 May...

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Main Authors: MA Bediako, M Nel, LA Hiemstra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2006-09-01
Series:Curationis
Online Access:https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1064
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spelling doaj-8e13d4aeb411408dba57d010fff560f42020-11-24T23:02:08ZengAOSISCurationis0379-85772223-62792006-09-01292121510.4102/curationis.v29i2.1064951Patients’ satisfaction with government health care and services in the Taung district, North West ProvinceMA Bediako0M Nel1LA Hiemstra2Department of Family Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Free State, BloemfonteinDepartment of Family Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Free State, BloemfonteinDepartment of Family Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Free State, BloemfonteinThis was a descriptive study that determined patients’ satisfaction with health care in the Taung district state health institutions, North West Province. One hospital, three health centres and five clinics were randomly selected, and consecutive patients were recruited at outpatients during 17 May 2000 - 17 June 2000. The patients completed a questionnaire regarding the service or care provided. Five hundred and sixty seven patients participated in the study. The median age was 30 years, and most patients were female (76.7%). More than half of patients (56.8%) were not satisfied with the availability of medicines and other supplies. Approximately two thirds of patients (65.2%) did not know about the quality of telephone services rendered. There was a high level of dissatisfaction (63.1 %) among patients regarding accessing doctors after hours. Most patients were satisfied with the general attitude of health workers (62.1 %) but 21.2% were dissatisfied. Few (11.7%) patients felt rushed during consultation. Most patients felt they received good health education when their illness was discussed (74.6%). Words and explanations used were easy to understand (76.7%); and they were not discouraged from asking questions (69.9%, n=539). Generally the level of satisfaction among the patients was high except for difficulty in accessing doctors after hours and lack of medicines.https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1064
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author MA Bediako
M Nel
LA Hiemstra
spellingShingle MA Bediako
M Nel
LA Hiemstra
Patients’ satisfaction with government health care and services in the Taung district, North West Province
Curationis
author_facet MA Bediako
M Nel
LA Hiemstra
author_sort MA Bediako
title Patients’ satisfaction with government health care and services in the Taung district, North West Province
title_short Patients’ satisfaction with government health care and services in the Taung district, North West Province
title_full Patients’ satisfaction with government health care and services in the Taung district, North West Province
title_fullStr Patients’ satisfaction with government health care and services in the Taung district, North West Province
title_full_unstemmed Patients’ satisfaction with government health care and services in the Taung district, North West Province
title_sort patients’ satisfaction with government health care and services in the taung district, north west province
publisher AOSIS
series Curationis
issn 0379-8577
2223-6279
publishDate 2006-09-01
description This was a descriptive study that determined patients’ satisfaction with health care in the Taung district state health institutions, North West Province. One hospital, three health centres and five clinics were randomly selected, and consecutive patients were recruited at outpatients during 17 May 2000 - 17 June 2000. The patients completed a questionnaire regarding the service or care provided. Five hundred and sixty seven patients participated in the study. The median age was 30 years, and most patients were female (76.7%). More than half of patients (56.8%) were not satisfied with the availability of medicines and other supplies. Approximately two thirds of patients (65.2%) did not know about the quality of telephone services rendered. There was a high level of dissatisfaction (63.1 %) among patients regarding accessing doctors after hours. Most patients were satisfied with the general attitude of health workers (62.1 %) but 21.2% were dissatisfied. Few (11.7%) patients felt rushed during consultation. Most patients felt they received good health education when their illness was discussed (74.6%). Words and explanations used were easy to understand (76.7%); and they were not discouraged from asking questions (69.9%, n=539). Generally the level of satisfaction among the patients was high except for difficulty in accessing doctors after hours and lack of medicines.
url https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1064
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