Primary Care Practice Workplace Social Capital: A Potential Secret Sauce for Improved Staff Well-Being and Patient Experience

Patient experiences with the health-care system are increasingly seen as a vital measure of health-care quality. This study examined whether workplace social capital and employee outcomes are associated with patients’ perceptions of care quality across multiple clinic sites in a diverse, urban safet...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Adam T Perzynski PhD, Aleece Caron PhD, David Margolius MD, Joseph J Sudano PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-03-01
Series:Journal of Patient Experience
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373518777742
id doaj-9059e0dde10647f8b274718f6635b885
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9059e0dde10647f8b274718f6635b8852020-11-25T02:48:09ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Patient Experience2374-37432374-37352019-03-01610.1177/2374373518777742Primary Care Practice Workplace Social Capital: A Potential Secret Sauce for Improved Staff Well-Being and Patient ExperienceAdam T Perzynski PhD0Aleece Caron PhD1David Margolius MD2Joseph J Sudano PhD3 Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USAPatient experiences with the health-care system are increasingly seen as a vital measure of health-care quality. This study examined whether workplace social capital and employee outcomes are associated with patients’ perceptions of care quality across multiple clinic sites in a diverse, urban safety net care setting. Data from clinic staff were collected using paper and pencil surveys and data from patients were collected via a telephone survey. A total of 8392 adult primary care patients and 265 staff (physicians, nurses, allied health, and support staff) were surveyed at 10 community health clinics. The staff survey included brief measures of workplace social capital, burnout, and job satisfaction. The patient-level outcome was patients’ overall rating of the quality of care. Factor analysis and reliability analysis were conducted to examine measurement properties of the employee data. Data were aggregated and measures were examined at the clinic site level. Workplace social capital had moderate to strong associations with burnout ( r = −0.40, P < .01) and job satisfaction ( r = 0.59, P < .01). Mean patient quality of care rating was 8.90 (95% confidence interval: 8.86-8.94) ranging from 8.57 to 9.18 across clinic sites. Pearson correlations with patient-rated care quality were high for workplace social capital ( r = 0.88, P = .001), employee burnout ( r = −0.74, P < .05), and satisfaction ( r = 0.69, P < .05). Patient-perceived clinic quality differences were largely explained by differences in workplace social capital, staff burnout, and satisfaction. Investments in workplace social capital to improve employee satisfaction and reduce burnout may be key to better patient experiences in primary care.https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373518777742
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adam T Perzynski PhD
Aleece Caron PhD
David Margolius MD
Joseph J Sudano PhD
spellingShingle Adam T Perzynski PhD
Aleece Caron PhD
David Margolius MD
Joseph J Sudano PhD
Primary Care Practice Workplace Social Capital: A Potential Secret Sauce for Improved Staff Well-Being and Patient Experience
Journal of Patient Experience
author_facet Adam T Perzynski PhD
Aleece Caron PhD
David Margolius MD
Joseph J Sudano PhD
author_sort Adam T Perzynski PhD
title Primary Care Practice Workplace Social Capital: A Potential Secret Sauce for Improved Staff Well-Being and Patient Experience
title_short Primary Care Practice Workplace Social Capital: A Potential Secret Sauce for Improved Staff Well-Being and Patient Experience
title_full Primary Care Practice Workplace Social Capital: A Potential Secret Sauce for Improved Staff Well-Being and Patient Experience
title_fullStr Primary Care Practice Workplace Social Capital: A Potential Secret Sauce for Improved Staff Well-Being and Patient Experience
title_full_unstemmed Primary Care Practice Workplace Social Capital: A Potential Secret Sauce for Improved Staff Well-Being and Patient Experience
title_sort primary care practice workplace social capital: a potential secret sauce for improved staff well-being and patient experience
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Patient Experience
issn 2374-3743
2374-3735
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Patient experiences with the health-care system are increasingly seen as a vital measure of health-care quality. This study examined whether workplace social capital and employee outcomes are associated with patients’ perceptions of care quality across multiple clinic sites in a diverse, urban safety net care setting. Data from clinic staff were collected using paper and pencil surveys and data from patients were collected via a telephone survey. A total of 8392 adult primary care patients and 265 staff (physicians, nurses, allied health, and support staff) were surveyed at 10 community health clinics. The staff survey included brief measures of workplace social capital, burnout, and job satisfaction. The patient-level outcome was patients’ overall rating of the quality of care. Factor analysis and reliability analysis were conducted to examine measurement properties of the employee data. Data were aggregated and measures were examined at the clinic site level. Workplace social capital had moderate to strong associations with burnout ( r = −0.40, P < .01) and job satisfaction ( r = 0.59, P < .01). Mean patient quality of care rating was 8.90 (95% confidence interval: 8.86-8.94) ranging from 8.57 to 9.18 across clinic sites. Pearson correlations with patient-rated care quality were high for workplace social capital ( r = 0.88, P = .001), employee burnout ( r = −0.74, P < .05), and satisfaction ( r = 0.69, P < .05). Patient-perceived clinic quality differences were largely explained by differences in workplace social capital, staff burnout, and satisfaction. Investments in workplace social capital to improve employee satisfaction and reduce burnout may be key to better patient experiences in primary care.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373518777742
work_keys_str_mv AT adamtperzynskiphd primarycarepracticeworkplacesocialcapitalapotentialsecretsauceforimprovedstaffwellbeingandpatientexperience
AT aleececaronphd primarycarepracticeworkplacesocialcapitalapotentialsecretsauceforimprovedstaffwellbeingandpatientexperience
AT davidmargoliusmd primarycarepracticeworkplacesocialcapitalapotentialsecretsauceforimprovedstaffwellbeingandpatientexperience
AT josephjsudanophd primarycarepracticeworkplacesocialcapitalapotentialsecretsauceforimprovedstaffwellbeingandpatientexperience
_version_ 1724749551955345408