Patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, Nigeria, using SERVQUAL theory

Background: Patient satisfaction is an essential parameter in the assessment of quality of care and healthcare facility performance. Objective: To investigate patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, South East, Nigeria, using the SERVQUAL. Methods: A cross-s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: MaryJoy Umoke, Prince Christian Ifeanachor Umoke, Ignatius O Nwimo, Chioma Adaora Nwalieji, Rosemary N Onwe, Nwafor Emmanuel Ifeanyi, Agbaje Samson Olaoluwa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-07-01
Series:SAGE Open Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312120945129
id doaj-9d4d857a474749ba9e46712433cf4179
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9d4d857a474749ba9e46712433cf41792020-11-25T02:42:14ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open Medicine2050-31212020-07-01810.1177/2050312120945129Patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, Nigeria, using SERVQUAL theoryMaryJoy Umoke0Prince Christian Ifeanachor Umoke1Ignatius O Nwimo2Chioma Adaora Nwalieji3Rosemary N Onwe4Nwafor Emmanuel Ifeanyi5Agbaje Samson Olaoluwa6School Health Programme Unit, Ebonyi State Ministry of Health Abakaliki, Abakaliki, NigeriaDepartment of Human Kinetics and Health Education, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, NigeriaDepartment of Human Kinetics and Health Education, Ebonyi State University, Abakaliki, NigeriaSchool Health Programme Unit, Ebonyi State Ministry of Health Abakaliki, Abakaliki, NigeriaDepartment of Economics, Ebonyi State University, Abakaliki, NigeriaVirology Centre Laboratory, Alex Ekwueme Federal University Teaching Hospital Abakaliki, Ebonyi State, NigeriaDepartment of Human Kinetics and Health Education, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, NigeriaBackground: Patient satisfaction is an essential parameter in the assessment of quality of care and healthcare facility performance. Objective: To investigate patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, South East, Nigeria, using the SERVQUAL. Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive study design was employed on a sample of 400 patients using a 27-item structured open-ended patients’ satisfaction questionnaire with a multi-stage cluster sampling technique. Patients included in the study were those who must have come for an outpatient clinic within the period, be 18 years and above, and those who gave consent to participate. Of 400 questionnaires administered, 396 (99%) were retrieved. SPSS version 20 was used for data analysis. Descriptive statistics, such as frequencies, percentages, mean score ( x ), and standard deviation, were employed for interpretation. Results: Out of 396 patients, 156 (39.4%) were male and 240 (60.6%) were females. Most patients were 18–39 years (233 (58.8%)), had secondary education (139 (35.1%)), married (221 (55.8%)), earned <18,000 (170(42.9%)), and were traders (136 (34.3%)). Patients were satisfied with tangibility (2.57 ± 0.99) and reliability (2.84 ± 0.95) and very satisfied with responsiveness (3.06 ± 0.63), assurance (3.07 ± 0.63), and empathy (3.12 ± 0.57). Conclusions: Patients were satisfied with the quality of care. However, satisfaction was highest with empathy and lowest with tangibility. Thus, managers should focus their quality improvement efforts on areas of the neat appearance of health workers, waiting facilities for attendants and patients, and hygienic conditions at the hospital. Also, biannual assessment of patients’ satisfaction should be done and the results generated use judiciously to provide a platform for health sector reform.https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312120945129
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author MaryJoy Umoke
Prince Christian Ifeanachor Umoke
Ignatius O Nwimo
Chioma Adaora Nwalieji
Rosemary N Onwe
Nwafor Emmanuel Ifeanyi
Agbaje Samson Olaoluwa
spellingShingle MaryJoy Umoke
Prince Christian Ifeanachor Umoke
Ignatius O Nwimo
Chioma Adaora Nwalieji
Rosemary N Onwe
Nwafor Emmanuel Ifeanyi
Agbaje Samson Olaoluwa
Patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, Nigeria, using SERVQUAL theory
SAGE Open Medicine
author_facet MaryJoy Umoke
Prince Christian Ifeanachor Umoke
Ignatius O Nwimo
Chioma Adaora Nwalieji
Rosemary N Onwe
Nwafor Emmanuel Ifeanyi
Agbaje Samson Olaoluwa
author_sort MaryJoy Umoke
title Patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, Nigeria, using SERVQUAL theory
title_short Patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, Nigeria, using SERVQUAL theory
title_full Patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, Nigeria, using SERVQUAL theory
title_fullStr Patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, Nigeria, using SERVQUAL theory
title_full_unstemmed Patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, Nigeria, using SERVQUAL theory
title_sort patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in ebonyi state, nigeria, using servqual theory
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open Medicine
issn 2050-3121
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Background: Patient satisfaction is an essential parameter in the assessment of quality of care and healthcare facility performance. Objective: To investigate patients’ satisfaction with quality of care in general hospitals in Ebonyi State, South East, Nigeria, using the SERVQUAL. Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive study design was employed on a sample of 400 patients using a 27-item structured open-ended patients’ satisfaction questionnaire with a multi-stage cluster sampling technique. Patients included in the study were those who must have come for an outpatient clinic within the period, be 18 years and above, and those who gave consent to participate. Of 400 questionnaires administered, 396 (99%) were retrieved. SPSS version 20 was used for data analysis. Descriptive statistics, such as frequencies, percentages, mean score ( x ), and standard deviation, were employed for interpretation. Results: Out of 396 patients, 156 (39.4%) were male and 240 (60.6%) were females. Most patients were 18–39 years (233 (58.8%)), had secondary education (139 (35.1%)), married (221 (55.8%)), earned <18,000 (170(42.9%)), and were traders (136 (34.3%)). Patients were satisfied with tangibility (2.57 ± 0.99) and reliability (2.84 ± 0.95) and very satisfied with responsiveness (3.06 ± 0.63), assurance (3.07 ± 0.63), and empathy (3.12 ± 0.57). Conclusions: Patients were satisfied with the quality of care. However, satisfaction was highest with empathy and lowest with tangibility. Thus, managers should focus their quality improvement efforts on areas of the neat appearance of health workers, waiting facilities for attendants and patients, and hygienic conditions at the hospital. Also, biannual assessment of patients’ satisfaction should be done and the results generated use judiciously to provide a platform for health sector reform.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312120945129
work_keys_str_mv AT maryjoyumoke patientssatisfactionwithqualityofcareingeneralhospitalsinebonyistatenigeriausingservqualtheory
AT princechristianifeanachorumoke patientssatisfactionwithqualityofcareingeneralhospitalsinebonyistatenigeriausingservqualtheory
AT ignatiusonwimo patientssatisfactionwithqualityofcareingeneralhospitalsinebonyistatenigeriausingservqualtheory
AT chiomaadaoranwalieji patientssatisfactionwithqualityofcareingeneralhospitalsinebonyistatenigeriausingservqualtheory
AT rosemarynonwe patientssatisfactionwithqualityofcareingeneralhospitalsinebonyistatenigeriausingservqualtheory
AT nwaforemmanuelifeanyi patientssatisfactionwithqualityofcareingeneralhospitalsinebonyistatenigeriausingservqualtheory
AT agbajesamsonolaoluwa patientssatisfactionwithqualityofcareingeneralhospitalsinebonyistatenigeriausingservqualtheory
_version_ 1724774439094059008