Assessment of users’ expectations, perceived quality and satisfaction with primary care in Greece

Aim: To explore users’ expectations, their perceived quality and their satisfaction with primary care services an anonymous questionnaire has been administered to a sample of 212 users.Background: Patient satisfaction with quality of primary care is a dominant concept in quality assurance and qualit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vasilios Raftopoulos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Professor Despina Sapountzi-Krepia 2010-01-01
Series:International Journal of Caring Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://internationaljournalofcaringsciences.org/docs/Vol3_Issue3_05_Raftopoulos.pdf
Description
Summary:Aim: To explore users’ expectations, their perceived quality and their satisfaction with primary care services an anonymous questionnaire has been administered to a sample of 212 users.Background: Patient satisfaction with quality of primary care is a dominant concept in quality assurance and quality improvement programs.Methods: It has been used the Expectations-Perceived Quality-Satisfaction with Primary Care Services Scale (E-PQ-SPCSS) that was developed and validated in this study. Data were analysed using SPSS, version 18.Results: The overall satisfaction with the primary care services was 97.2%, with the medical care provided was 95.3% and with nursing care was 92.5%. Nursing care was provided to 126 (59.4%) users. These users were more satisfied (p<0.0001) with global nursing care provided (4.52±0.70) than those who were not provided a nursing care intervention (3.53±1.73). Age correlated with global satisfaction with primary care (r=0.315, p<0.001) with medical (r=0.194, p<0.001) and nursing care (r=0.183, p<0.001) as well as with expectations totalscore (r=0.295, p<0.001), perceived quality of care total score (r=0.366, p<0.001) and satisfaction with care total score (r=0.207, p=0.002). Based on Cattell’s visual scree plot, four factors accounting for 64.34% of the item covariance were extracted and rotated through factor analysis (nurse’s technical and interpersonal competence, physician’s interpersonal competence, physician’s technical competence and structure characteristics).Conclusions: The psychometric properties of the E-PQ-SPCSS were good enough indicating that the scales are reliable and adequate for group comparisons.
ISSN:1791-5201
1792-037X