Patient satisfaction: a study of Hamedan teaching and general hospitals

Objective(s): This study examined patient satisfaction and related factors in the general hospitals affiliated to Hamedan Medical University Sciences. Methods: A sample of 400 patients was studied in 5 university hospitals in Hamedan. Participants were asked to fill in a "satisfaction" que...

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Main Authors: Saifrabie M.A, Shahidzadeh Mahani A.
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: Iranian Institute for Health Sciences Research 2006-10-01
Series:Payesh
Subjects:
Online Access:http://payeshjournal.ir/article-1-729-en.html
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author Saifrabie M.A
Shahidzadeh Mahani A.
author_facet Saifrabie M.A
Shahidzadeh Mahani A.
author_sort Saifrabie M.A
collection DOAJ
description Objective(s): This study examined patient satisfaction and related factors in the general hospitals affiliated to Hamedan Medical University Sciences. Methods: A sample of 400 patients was studied in 5 university hospitals in Hamedan. Participants were asked to fill in a "satisfaction" questionnaire under the supervision of a trained hospital nurse. The questionnaire consisted of 44 multiple choice and open-ended questions. To look at the factors that could affect patient satisfaction, 11 independent variables were examined: age, sex, marital status, education, employment, income, living conditions, admitted hospital and admitted ward, access to hospital and specific information on the disease. Results: The overall rate of satisfaction with hospital services was 72%. About 40.5% of patients did not know what kind of disease they had and for 44.7% access to hospital was difficult. In response to the question "would you recounted this hospital to others?" only 45.3% answered "yes". Moreover, 27.7% of the respondents reported some shortcomings such as: poor sanitation (34%), problems with general facilities such as poor food quality, and crowded rooms (30.6%), and lack of adequate medical equipment (13.7%). in the final analysis, the variables showing a significant relationship with in-patient satisfaction were education, income and access to hospital. Conclusion: In general patients were satisfied with hospitals, although they indicated areas that needs to be improved. The results suggest that patients with lower socioeconomic status were more satisfied as compared to those with higher socioeconomic background.
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spelling doaj.art-8f6fae39d94b4a52abaed3cce31eea2a2022-12-22T01:22:42ZfasIranian Institute for Health Sciences ResearchPayesh1680-76262008-45362006-10-015400Patient satisfaction: a study of Hamedan teaching and general hospitalsSaifrabie M.A0Shahidzadeh Mahani A.1 Objective(s): This study examined patient satisfaction and related factors in the general hospitals affiliated to Hamedan Medical University Sciences. Methods: A sample of 400 patients was studied in 5 university hospitals in Hamedan. Participants were asked to fill in a "satisfaction" questionnaire under the supervision of a trained hospital nurse. The questionnaire consisted of 44 multiple choice and open-ended questions. To look at the factors that could affect patient satisfaction, 11 independent variables were examined: age, sex, marital status, education, employment, income, living conditions, admitted hospital and admitted ward, access to hospital and specific information on the disease. Results: The overall rate of satisfaction with hospital services was 72%. About 40.5% of patients did not know what kind of disease they had and for 44.7% access to hospital was difficult. In response to the question "would you recounted this hospital to others?" only 45.3% answered "yes". Moreover, 27.7% of the respondents reported some shortcomings such as: poor sanitation (34%), problems with general facilities such as poor food quality, and crowded rooms (30.6%), and lack of adequate medical equipment (13.7%). in the final analysis, the variables showing a significant relationship with in-patient satisfaction were education, income and access to hospital. Conclusion: In general patients were satisfied with hospitals, although they indicated areas that needs to be improved. The results suggest that patients with lower socioeconomic status were more satisfied as compared to those with higher socioeconomic background.http://payeshjournal.ir/article-1-729-en.htmlsatisfactionmeasurementhospitalservicesaccess
spellingShingle Saifrabie M.A
Shahidzadeh Mahani A.
Patient satisfaction: a study of Hamedan teaching and general hospitals
Payesh
satisfaction
measurement
hospital
services
access
title Patient satisfaction: a study of Hamedan teaching and general hospitals
title_full Patient satisfaction: a study of Hamedan teaching and general hospitals
title_fullStr Patient satisfaction: a study of Hamedan teaching and general hospitals
title_full_unstemmed Patient satisfaction: a study of Hamedan teaching and general hospitals
title_short Patient satisfaction: a study of Hamedan teaching and general hospitals
title_sort patient satisfaction a study of hamedan teaching and general hospitals
topic satisfaction
measurement
hospital
services
access
url http://payeshjournal.ir/article-1-729-en.html
work_keys_str_mv AT saifrabiema patientsatisfactionastudyofhamedanteachingandgeneralhospitals
AT shahidzadehmahania patientsatisfactionastudyofhamedanteachingandgeneralhospitals