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Assessing Staff's and Stroke Patients' Experiences in 8 Hospitals in Greece: Results from a Prospective Multi-Center Study ("SUN4Patients").

Authors :
Galanis P
Konstantakopoulou O
Karagkouni I
Gallos P
Tsampalas E
Lypiridou M
Gamvroula A
Mavraganis G
Manios E
Ntaios G
Karagkiozi E
Milionis H
Evangelou C
Tountopoulou A
Kouzi I
Vassilopoulou S
Protogerou A
Samara S
Karapiperi A
Savopoulos C
Hatzitolios AI
Myrou A
Kalliontzakis I
Kouridaki A
Papastefanatos S
Papastefanatos G
Vemmos K
Sourtzi P
Bellali T
Korompoki E
Kaitelidou D
Siskou O
Source :
Studies in health technology and informatics [Stud Health Technol Inform] 2022 Jan 14; Vol. 289, pp. 392-396.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To assess stroke patient-reported experiences and hospital staff experiences, during hospital stay.<br />Methods: Stroke patient-reported experiences (n=387) were recorded using the translated and culturally adapted NHS-Stroke Questionnaire into Greek and staff experiences (n=236) were investigated using the Compassion Satisfaction and Burnout subscales of the ProQOL questionnaire.<br />Results: Staff's mean compassion satisfaction score was 39.2 (SD=6.3) and mean burnout score was 24.3 (SD=5.6). Only 38.5% of the staff stated that there is smooth cooperation with healthcare professionals of other specialties/disciplines. Personnel working in an NHS Hospital was more satisfied and less burned-out when compared to personnel working at a University Hospital (p=0.02 and p<0.001, respectively). Mean total patient-reported experiences score was 81.9 (SD=9.5). Bivariate analysis revealed statistically significant differences for total patient-reported experiences among the eight study hospitals (p>0.001).<br />Conclusions: Health policy planners and decision-makers must take into consideration the results of such self-reported measures to establish innovative techniques to accomplish goals such as staff-specialization, continuous training and applying formal frameworks for efficient cooperation amongst different disciplines.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1879-8365
Volume :
289
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Studies in health technology and informatics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35062174
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3233/SHTI210941