Abstract

(1) Background: The importance of physician-patient communication and its effect on patient satisfaction has become a hot topic and has been studied from various aspects in recent years. However, there is a lack of systematic reviews to integrate recent research findings into patient satisfaction studies with physician communication. Therefore, this study aims to systematically examine physician communication’s effect on patient satisfaction in public hospitals. (2) Methods: Using a keywords search, data was collected from five databases for the papers published until October 2021. Original studies, observational studies, intervention studies, cross-sectional studies, cohort studies, experimental studies, and qualitative studies published in English, peer-reviewed research, and inpatients who communicated with the physician in a hospital met the inclusion criteria. (3) Results: Overall, 11 studies met the inclusion criteria from the 4810 articles found in the database. Physicians and organizations can influence two determinants of inpatient satisfaction in physician communication. Determinants of patient satisfaction that physicians influence consist of amounts of time spent with the patient, verbal and nonverbal indirect interpersonal communication, and understanding the demands of patients. The organization can improve patient satisfaction with physician communication by the organization’s availability of interpreter service and physician workload. Physicians’ communication with inpatients can affect patient satisfaction with hospital services. (4) Conclusions: To improve patient satisfaction with physician communication, physicians and organizational determinants must be considered.

Highlights

  • Patient satisfaction is becoming a hot topic in global health policy

  • Six articles [25,26,39,41–43] out of the 11 articles met the review criteria, showing either that patient satisfaction with hospital services was more than 80%, or that an increase after intervention was higher than the national survey results

  • Our study found that physician-patient communication affects patient satisfaction

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Summary

Introduction

Patient satisfaction is becoming a hot topic in global health policy. It is a crucial component of pay-for-performance measures and a critical predictor of care quality. Patient satisfaction is crucial for ensuring how well patients do; previous research has established a link between patient outcomes and levels of satisfaction [1]. Patient satisfaction has been connected to subsequent usage of health services, affecting both patient compliance and treatment continuity [2]. Dissatisfied patients are more inclined to file a complaint or seek redress with the establishment to ease cognitive dissonance and a poor service experience [3]. Dissatisfaction leads to poor adherence to treatment regimens, missed visits, and even negative word-of-mouth, which might dissuade others from obtaining care from the system or urge them to seek it elsewhere [4,5]

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