What Is So Great about Inpatient Rehabilitation from the Patient Experience Perspective: Qualitative Content Analysis of an Appreciative Inquiry during a Bedside Experience Rounding
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Which are the ‘positive’ or great experiences of care that patients often evoke at the point of care (i.e., during inpatient rehabilitation stay) when openly elicited from an appreciative standpoint?
2. Methods
3. Results
- 1.
- Numerical overview
- 2.
- Major categories from the content analysis
- 3.
- Subcategories of staff attributes
“I think they have gone beyond their duties to make me feel comfortable”, patient #3.
“I find the staff is paying attention to my care with things I don’t even speak up about. My foot was drooping to the side and the nurse noticed and got me boots to help. I didn’t even ‘aask’ her [emphasis]”, patient #24.
“I was pushed but not forced, it wasn’t like a boot camp experience”, patient #94.
“They reassure me where I am at. If I am having a lousy day they don’t push, they listen and are there but don’t push me”, patient #46.
“[She] toldddddd [emphasis] me to give it some time and see how everything works and if I still didn’t like it then go home. She was right! My stay here has been life-changing and I am appreciative”, patient #100.
“[He/She] tells me I am doing good and beginning to walk, that’s a blessing to me; they inspire you to do good”
“The encouragement I receive from everyone especially my [therapists], I just love them. It has become personal when I make accomplishments; I am wanting to make them proud and they celebrate with me and make me feel special”, patient #107.
“The way they take your time and teach me. They adapt to their patients”, patient #87.
“[She] is wonderful and such a great listener, if I have a problem she listens and tries to fix it. When she walks out the door, I never feel like something was unresolved”, patient #12.
“Staff listen to me and they make adjustments to my preference”, patient #109.
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
IRF | Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility |
QI | Quality Improvement |
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Categories | Examples of Attributes | Total (n; %) | Exclusive (n; %) |
---|---|---|---|
Staff Attributes | Interpersonal attributes and behaviors; knowledge; professionalism | 82; 67.2% | 54; 44.3% |
Patient care | Perceived quality and progress; therapy is great, enjoyable, varied, or spaced out | 38; 31.1% | 22; 18.0% |
Leisure and social activities | Going outside; meeting new people; having fun with peers—including in group therapy | 11: 9.0% | 3; 2.5% |
Built environment | Facility; pleasant physical environment; views. | 5; 4.1% | 2; 1.6% |
Teamwork | Perceived alignment; shared information | 5; 4.1% | 2; 1.6% |
Food service | 6; 4.9% | 1; 0.8% | |
Cleanliness | 6; 4.9% | 1; 0.8% | |
Bed quality | 2; 1.6% | 1; 0.8% | |
Customer service | 1; 0.8% | 1; 0.8% | |
Quietness | 1; 0.8% | 1; 0.8% | |
Equipment (gym) | 4; 3.3% | 0; 0% | |
Room quality | 2; 2.4% | 0; 0% |
Subcategories of Staff Attributes | Total (n; % of Total) | Exclusive Subcategory (n; % of Total) |
---|---|---|
Attentive & caring—beyond clinical duty | 25; 20.5% | 16; 11.5% |
Kind, friendly, and smiling | 16; 13.1% | 6; 4.9% |
Encouraging (but not too hard) & reassuring | 10; 8.2% | 9; 7.4% |
Listening and responsive to | 10; 8.2% | 5; 4.1% |
Professional & knowledgeable | 8; 6.6% | 1; 0.8% |
Overall positive appraisals of staff, i.e., not subcategorized | 28; 23% | 10; 8.2% |
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Jesus, T.S.; Buschbacher, J.; Struhar, J.; Walters, T.; Lopez, C.; Fernandez, A.; Gracz, K.; Colby, K. What Is So Great about Inpatient Rehabilitation from the Patient Experience Perspective: Qualitative Content Analysis of an Appreciative Inquiry during a Bedside Experience Rounding. Healthcare 2024, 12, 1711. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171711
Jesus TS, Buschbacher J, Struhar J, Walters T, Lopez C, Fernandez A, Gracz K, Colby K. What Is So Great about Inpatient Rehabilitation from the Patient Experience Perspective: Qualitative Content Analysis of an Appreciative Inquiry during a Bedside Experience Rounding. Healthcare. 2024; 12(17):1711. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171711
Chicago/Turabian StyleJesus, Tiago S., Julia Buschbacher, Jan Struhar, Taylor Walters, Courtney Lopez, Andrea Fernandez, Kristen Gracz, and Karen Colby. 2024. "What Is So Great about Inpatient Rehabilitation from the Patient Experience Perspective: Qualitative Content Analysis of an Appreciative Inquiry during a Bedside Experience Rounding" Healthcare 12, no. 17: 1711. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171711
APA StyleJesus, T. S., Buschbacher, J., Struhar, J., Walters, T., Lopez, C., Fernandez, A., Gracz, K., & Colby, K. (2024). What Is So Great about Inpatient Rehabilitation from the Patient Experience Perspective: Qualitative Content Analysis of an Appreciative Inquiry during a Bedside Experience Rounding. Healthcare, 12(17), 1711. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171711