An analysis of complaints in two large tertiary university teaching hospital ENT departments – a two year retrospective review
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Published version
Author(s)
Bujoreanu, Iulia
Hariri, Ahmad
Acharya, Vikas
Taghi, Ali
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Introduction: Complaints relating to patient care are known to correlate with surgical complication rates and malpractice lawsuits. In a continually evolving health service and on-going financial pressures, identifying current complaint themes could drive future improvements in healthcare delivery.
Objective: The aim of this paper is to review and analyse complaints received by the ENT department of two large teaching hospitals in London in order to determine current trends and mitigate future challenges.
Method: All complaints registered with the Patient Advice and Liaison Service (PALS) from the ENT Department at our institution were collected between June 2016 and August 2018. Demographic information was collated and complaints were analysed and interpreted as per a standardised coding taxonomy.
Results: A total of 242 complaints were collected. Most (91.7%) were logged by patients themselves with a mean age of 48.3 (range 3–98 years). The majority were directed at the administrative team (52%) followed by management (23.5%) and then clinicians (16.9%). Administrative issues were the most common (50.1%) followed by clinical (25.1%) and relationship/communication (24.7%). The bulk of complaints focused on delays in access to services and treatment in the form of cancellations and long appointment waiting times (37%).
Conclusion: There has been a significant shift in complaints themes from clinical issues to administrative issues. This may reflect increasing financial and staffing pressures in the NHS. Complaints analysis is key in quality improvement and a cross-specialty integrated filing system in concordance with the recently proposed taxonomy would ease future collection and analysis of data.
Objective: The aim of this paper is to review and analyse complaints received by the ENT department of two large teaching hospitals in London in order to determine current trends and mitigate future challenges.
Method: All complaints registered with the Patient Advice and Liaison Service (PALS) from the ENT Department at our institution were collected between June 2016 and August 2018. Demographic information was collated and complaints were analysed and interpreted as per a standardised coding taxonomy.
Results: A total of 242 complaints were collected. Most (91.7%) were logged by patients themselves with a mean age of 48.3 (range 3–98 years). The majority were directed at the administrative team (52%) followed by management (23.5%) and then clinicians (16.9%). Administrative issues were the most common (50.1%) followed by clinical (25.1%) and relationship/communication (24.7%). The bulk of complaints focused on delays in access to services and treatment in the form of cancellations and long appointment waiting times (37%).
Conclusion: There has been a significant shift in complaints themes from clinical issues to administrative issues. This may reflect increasing financial and staffing pressures in the NHS. Complaints analysis is key in quality improvement and a cross-specialty integrated filing system in concordance with the recently proposed taxonomy would ease future collection and analysis of data.
Date Issued
2020-03-28
Date Acceptance
2020-02-11
Citation
International Journal of Otolaryngology, 2020, 2020, pp.1-6
ISSN
1687-9201
Publisher
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
Start Page
1
End Page
6
Journal / Book Title
International Journal of Otolaryngology
Volume
2020
Copyright Statement
© 2020 Iulia Bujoreanu et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution
License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is
properly cited.
License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is
properly cited.
Copyright URL
Identifier
https://www.hindawi.com/journals/ijoto/2020/1484687/
Subjects
1103 Clinical Sciences
1199 Other Medical and Health Sciences
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
1484687
Date Publish Online
2020-03-28