Why Measure Patient Experience in Physical Therapy?

patient experience patient reported experience measures physical therapy

Journal

Archives of physiotherapy
ISSN: 2057-0082
Titre abrégé: Arch Physiother
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101688712

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
03 May 2021
Historique:
received: 04 01 2021
accepted: 12 03 2021
entrez: 3 5 2021
pubmed: 4 5 2021
medline: 4 5 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Patient experience is an important component of quality and patient centered health care not fully explored in physical therapy. This article addresses (1) concept of patient experience, (2) importance of capturing the patient experience, (3) measures to capture patient experience and whether these measures exhibit psychometrically sound measurement properties, (4) relationship between patient experience and clinical effectiveness outcomes, and (5) clinical applications of patient experience measures in the outpatient physical therapy setting, including suggestions for future studies. Employing patient experience measures into physical therapy practice may be an important key to improve clinical effectiveness outcomes and provide excellent patient-centered care delivery. An area of continued research should be focused on demonstrating the generalizability and measurement properties of patient reported experience measures for the musculoskeletal outpatient physical therapy population focusing first on the most common musculoskeletal conditions such as cervical, low back, and shoulder pain.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Patient experience is an important component of quality and patient centered health care not fully explored in physical therapy.
MAIN BODY METHODS
This article addresses (1) concept of patient experience, (2) importance of capturing the patient experience, (3) measures to capture patient experience and whether these measures exhibit psychometrically sound measurement properties, (4) relationship between patient experience and clinical effectiveness outcomes, and (5) clinical applications of patient experience measures in the outpatient physical therapy setting, including suggestions for future studies.
SHORT CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
Employing patient experience measures into physical therapy practice may be an important key to improve clinical effectiveness outcomes and provide excellent patient-centered care delivery. An area of continued research should be focused on demonstrating the generalizability and measurement properties of patient reported experience measures for the musculoskeletal outpatient physical therapy population focusing first on the most common musculoskeletal conditions such as cervical, low back, and shoulder pain.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33934705
doi: 10.1186/s40945-021-00105-2
pii: 10.1186/s40945-021-00105-2
pmc: PMC8091659
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

11

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Auteurs

Jacob Eversole (J)

College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, Doctor of Physical Therapy Program, Campbell University, 4150 US 421 South, Lillington, NC, 27546, USA.

Ashton Grimm (A)

College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, Doctor of Physical Therapy Program, Campbell University, 4150 US 421 South, Lillington, NC, 27546, USA.

Nikita Patel (N)

College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, Doctor of Physical Therapy Program, Campbell University, 4150 US 421 South, Lillington, NC, 27546, USA.

Kelly John (K)

College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, Doctor of Physical Therapy Program, Campbell University, 4150 US 421 South, Lillington, NC, 27546, USA.

Alessandra N Garcia (AN)

College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, Doctor of Physical Therapy Program, Campbell University, 4150 US 421 South, Lillington, NC, 27546, USA. alessandra.garcia.pt@gmail.com.

Classifications MeSH