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Med Care. 1988 Apr;26(4):393-402. doi: 10.1097/00005650-198804000-00008.

Methods for measuring patient satisfaction with specific medical encounters.

Medical care

J E Ware, R D Hays

Affiliations

  1. Rand Corporation, Behavioral Sciences Department, Santa Monica, CA 90406-2138.

PMID: 3352332 DOI: 10.1097/00005650-198804000-00008

Abstract

This paper presents the results of two studies that compared methods for measuring patient satisfaction with specific medical encounters. One form used six-point response scales ranging from "very satisfied" to "very dissatisfied" (S6 scale); the other used five-point scales ranging from "excellent" to "poor" (E5 scale). Forms were assigned randomly to outpatients in fee-for-service (N = 136) and prepaid systems of care (N = 363) and were compared in terms of response variability, reliability, and validity. In both studies, the E5 scales showed greater response variability and better predicted whether patients intended to return to the same doctor in the future, recommend the doctor to a friend, and comply with the medical regimen. Reliability was satisfactory and did not differ between methods. Results are discussed in terms of their implications for constructing visit-specific satisfaction rating scales.

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