Table 1.
Author/s | Year | Location | Setting | Participants | Method | Objectives | Relevant findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Busby, Matthews, Burke, Mullins and Schumaker | 2015 | UK | 64 Dental practices (64) | 10,810 Patients | Surveys | To investigate the relationship between perceived quality and patients' tendencies to recommend a practice to friends and colleagues. |
|
Gerrard, Jones and Hierons | 2017 | UK | Primary care oral practices (3) | 2019 Patients (Round 1) and 202 patients (Round 2) | Surveys | To test the suitability of PREMs and PROMs surveying. |
|
Hamilton, Lane, Gaston, Patton, MacDonald, Simpson and Howie | 2014 | UK | Orthopaedic centre (1) | 6186 Patients | Surveys | To quantify NPS for joint replacement and ascertain how care is benchmarked against nonhealthcare services, and assess which factors influenced the patients' recommendation response. |
|
Koladycz, Fernandez, Gray and Marriott | 2018 | India, Kenya, Nigeria and El Salvador | Family planning clinics | 188 Patients in Mumbai, 590 patients (in nine clinics) in Kenya and Nigeria, and 226 patients (in three clinics) in El Salvador | Surveys and interviews (face‐to‐face and telephone) | To test the feasibility and acceptability of implementation approaches in low‐resource clinical settings; to assess whether the methodology could be used to generate meaningful comparative information about the experience of different client groups; and assess the feasibility of a self‐administered NPS using tablets. |
|
Krol, Maarten W.; Boer, Dolf; Delnoij, Diana M.; Rademakers, Jany J. D. J. M. | 2015 | The Netherlands | Acute hospitals (6) | 6018 Inpatient surveys | Surveys | To assess what the NPS adds to patient experience surveys, and to establish whether NPS is a valid measure for summarizing patient experiences. |
|
Lawton, O'Hara, Sheard, Reynolds, Cocks, Armitage and Wright | 2015 | UK | Hospital wards (33) | 822 Patients and 648 staff | Surveys | To investigate whether the safety information provided by patients is different from that provided by staff, and whether it is related to safety outcomes. |
|
Manacorda, Erens, Black and Mays | 2017 | UK | General practices (40) | 118 Staff, with clinicians, practice managers and patient representatives | Semi‐structured interviews | To examine the views of practice staff and patients of NPS (FFT), how results are used and to recommend improvements. |
|
Marsh, Peacock, Sheard, Hughes and Lawton | 2018 | UK | Hospitals | Database search | Scoping review | Review and categorize the types of patient experience feedback data available to understand their function in quality improvement. |
|
Medforth and Rooksby | 2017 | UK | General and dental practices (8) | Children | Survey review and case study | To use quantitative data from the Children and Young Person Friendly Friends and Family Test (CYPFF) to assess the impact that the CYPFFT resources have on the uptake of the FFT by children and young people. |
|
Sizmur, Graham and Walsh | 2015 | UK | Hospitals (32) | 38,998 Inpatients and 29,610 ED attendees | Secondary analysis of data collected | To investigate the impact of demographic factors and the mode of administration of a national patient experience questionnaire (FFT). |
|
Stirling, Jenkins, Clement, Duckworth and McEachan | 2019 | UK | Centre for hand surgery (1) | 810 Patients | Surveys | To quantify NPS for specific hand surgery, identify contributing factors and evaluate the suitability of NPS as an outcome measure for hand surgery. |
|
Wilberforce, Poll, Langham, Worden and Challis | 2018 | UK | Mental health teams for older people | 352 Respondents | Surveys | To explore the value of NPS as a service improvement tool and outcome measure. |
|
Abbreviations: FFT, Friends and Family Test; GP, general practitioner; NPS, Net Promoter Score; PREM, patient‐reported experience measure; PROM, patient‐reported outcome measure.