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Outlook > 2008 > May
Most patients satisfied
PATIENT satisfaction is up to near record levels, says the Ministry of Health.
Hospital Benchmark Information (HBI) reports are produced quarterly by
the Ministry of Health and track the performance of all public
hospitals in New Zealand against 15 key performance measures.
The reports help hospitals measure their performance against one
another and look for ways to improve, says Chief Clinical Advisor Dr
Sandy Dawson.
Among the performance measures are triage rates (emergency department
waiting times), patient satisfaction, average length of stay and acute
readmissions.
Patient satisfaction levels are the second highest since the Ministry of Health began measuring them in 2000.
In the latest October to December 2007 quarter, levels of overall
patient satisfaction are high, at a near record national level of 88.5
per cent, up from 87.7 per cent last quarter.
"The vast majority of patients are clearly satisfied with their
encounter with the public health system. Most patients receive
excellent care from hardworking health professionals," says Dr Dawson.
All District Health Boards (DHBs) met the target for treating Triage 1
patients in emergency departments. Triage 1 is the most urgent category
and DHBs are expected to see 100 per cent of patients in this category
immediately.
Eight DHBs met or exceeded the target for Triage 2 with 80 per cent of
patients seen within 10 minutes. Seven DHBs met the target for treating
75 per cent of Triage 3 patients within the recommended 30 minutes.
Since March 2007, DHBs have been reporting the number of Staphylococcus
aureus bloodstream infections against the number of bed days in
hospital.
The focus on S. aureus infections is because they are one cause of poor
outcomes for patients, they usually result from healthcare procedures
such as the insertion of catheters and the introduction of the
infection through surgery, and they are potentially avoidable.
Figures show the national infection rates for the December 2007 quarter was 0.12 infections per 1000 bed days.
"We expect to see a high degree of statistical variability in these
figures over time, and so it is difficult to draw any conclusions about
DHB performance at this early stage of data collection," says Dr Dawson.
Tairawhiti, Wairarapa, West Coast and Whanganui DHBs reported no S. aureusbloodstream infections in this quarter. |