Abstract

Purpose – This paper focuses on the analysis of the most common tools that health care organizations use to assess the quality of the delivered services, the patient surveys. In line with the results of a systematic literature review on the issue, the study embraces service ecosystem perspective to understand why these surveys are unable to grasp actors’ disposition to co-create value for the health care system. Methodology – An in-depth literature review based on PRISMA framework explored 34 works on the topic of patient surveys in order to trace the evolution of the relationship users/providers and to highlight the criticalities related to the adoption of patient surveys in service-oriented era. The study discusses critically their efficacy to understand how they can affect (positively or negatively) the viability of a health care service eco-system. Findings – The literature review highlights patient surveys inability in grasping the real perception that patients have of experienced services and in involving them in value co-creation, through their engagement in service design and delivery. Moreover, the results reveal the need to adopt Service Dominant (S-D) Logic and service eco-system perspective to reread the traditional tools to measure quality in healthcare. For this reason, the metaphor of health service eco-system “infection” is launched, depicting the negative influence of patient satisfaction surveys on value co-creation and the subsequent service eco-system viability. Practical implications – The study shows that assuming a service eco-system perspective based on S-D logic, health care system should boost and preserve value co-creation processes. Moreover, institutions should foster those “rules of the game” that institutionalize the contribution of health providers to value co-creation, defining specific strategies to avoid the “infections” of health care service eco-system, e.g. investing and promoting non-detrimental tools.Originality – This study represents one of the first attempts to reread the tools used to assess patient embracing a service eco-system perspective. Interesting implications have been presented in terms of the negative effect that traditional assessment tools have on providers, patients and the whole society.

Highlights

  • Health care is one of the most complex and challenging issue, we face; it pervades almost all societal dimensions, influencing highly both economies and individuals’ quality of life (Berry & Bendaputi, 2007).Currently, health care service domain is characterized by several tricky problems

  • Following the two research questions outlined in the previous section, a systematic literature review (SLR) based on an inductive content analysis has been performed to identify how patient’s perceived quality is understood in current management literature, and assess if the traditional tools for measuring quality meet the current vision of service

  • Between January and April 2018 three researchers on services management carried out a systematic literature review according to the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis) methodology (Moher, Liberati, Tezlaff, & Altman, 2009)

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Summary

Introduction

Health care is one of the most complex and challenging issue, we face; it pervades almost all societal dimensions, influencing highly both economies and individuals’ quality of life (Berry & Bendaputi, 2007).Currently, health care service domain is characterized by several tricky problems. Institutions have to find new ways to solve, among others, the rise in costs – improving, simultaneously, the quality of the provided services (Carter & Silverman, 2016), – the number of medical errors, the high tendency towards the discrimination and the rising demand for high quality services (Polese & Capunzo, 2013) To face those afore-mentioned as well as the other problems that still affect the National Health Care Systems (NHCS) of developed countries, some systemic interventions are needed to boost the health state of each individual, the quality of their and their families daily life as well as the wellbeing of the whole society. This situation is mainly due to health organizations enduring focus on “products” (e.g. hospitalization, ambulatory care, medications, procedures, therapeutic care, etc.) and their failure to embrace a service-centered view (Chakraborty, Bhattacharya, & Dobrzykowski, 2014)

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