Abstract

On the Press Ganey (PG) survey, the item "likelihood of recommending practice" is a proxy for patient satisfaction because only the most satisfied patients will recommend a practice to friends and family. The objective of this study is to determine which other items on the PG survey best correlate with "likelihood of recommending practice" as a measure of patient satisfaction in pediatric otolaryngology. Retrospective analysis of a survey database. The PG survey, consisting of 24 questions scaled from 1 to 5 representing (1) very poor, (2) poor, (3) fair, (4) good, and (5) very good, was sent to 28 different pediatric otolaryngology practices. Using the Pearson correlation coefficient, the statistical relationship of each PG survey question was analyzed in its association to the PG question "likelihood of recommending practice." Factors with a correlation coefficient greater than 0.65 were considered significant. Ten of 24 questions on the PG survey correlated with a top "likelihood of recommending practice" score. Eight of these 10 items were from the Care Provider category and were related to the physician-patient/family interaction. Patient satisfaction surveys are utilized as a quality metric of the patient and family experience. These scores serve as one of several measures that affect reimbursement. The results demonstrate that most of the factors correlated with "likelihood of recommending practice" are provider-based. In conclusion, the physician-patient interaction strongly influences the potential for a practice to earn top box scores on the PG item "likelihood of recommending practice" and thereby achieve the highest patient satisfaction. NA. Laryngoscope, 129:2610-2613, 2019.

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