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Voiceless and vulnerable: An existential phenomenology of the patient experience in 21st century British hospitals. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The NHS in Britain is increasingly focused on understanding patient experience due to policy failures and media scrutiny, relying mainly on satisfaction surveys for data.
  • The study utilized existential phenomenology to gather in-depth narratives from 12 participants, highlighting aspects of patient experience that satisfaction surveys can't capture.
  • Key themes from the interviews included feelings of uncertainty, suffering, the ineffectiveness of feedback, and a sense of vulnerability during hospital admissions, showcasing how individual personalities influence responses to illness and hospital care.

Article Abstract

Current health policy, high-profile failures and increased media scrutiny have led to a significant focus on patient experience in Britain's National Health Service (NHS). Patient experience data is typically gathered through surveys of satisfaction. The study aimed to support a better understanding of the patient experience and patients' expression of it through consideration of the aspects of the patient experience on NHS wards which are by their nature impossible to capture through patient satisfaction surveys. Existential phenomenology was used to develop an in-depth exploratory narrative, expressed through the voices of the participants. Data collection involved in-depth face-to-face interviews with 12 purposively sampled participants, with analysis by means of hermeneutics. Though the individuality of each experience was apparent and cannot be overemphasised, common factors emerging from the data included uncertainty and unexpectedness, suffering and finitude, the futility of feedback and bureaucracy and absurdity. Overall, participants demonstrated how their individual personalities and expectations affected their response both to illness or injury and to their hospital admissions, highlighting feelings of vulnerability and voicelessness as a response to hospitalisation. The findings of this study provide useful insight into the patient experience on British hospital wards, and the value of an existential-phenomenological approach is demonstrated.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nin.12588DOI Listing

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