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Comparing breast and lung cancer patients' experiences at a UK Cancer centre: implications for improving care and moves towards a person centred model of clinical practice

Comparing breast and lung cancer patients' experiences at a UK Cancer centre: implications for improving care and moves towards a person centred model of clinical practice
Comparing breast and lung cancer patients' experiences at a UK Cancer centre: implications for improving care and moves towards a person centred model of clinical practice
Patient surveys are increasingly used to obtain feedback about experiences of care to guide changes in the way services are delivered. We compared the experiences of breast and lung cancer patients at diagnosis, in-patient and outpatient care at a Cancer Centre using a locally adapted version of the Picker Institute Cancer Patient Experience Survey. 65% of breast (82/127) and 65% of lung (75/116) cancer patients responded. Both groups reported good experiences at diagnosis, good support from clinical nurse specialists, and had very positive overall views. Breast patients had slightly poorer experiences of hospital stays while lung patients less often received clinical nurse specialist support and information about other support. Both groups reported that written information was not always provided. 84% (132/157) consented to data on the clinical severity of their condition being used to investigate whether this influenced experiences. This study showed that supportive care policies are being implemented at diagnosis and patients value clinical nurse specialist care. Sufficiently large comparative surveys can identify specific areas of performance for services to focus upon in order to improve quality of care. Patients facing poor prognoses can complete surveys and future studies might explore whether disease stage is associated with differing experiences.
2043-7749
177-189
Davies, Elizabeth
411f4910-47b8-42cb-9f83-a7569cf30602
Madden, Peter
93c0041b-851e-4ed3-8d31-76a41115d5fc
Coupland, Victoria
8b3ac151-b485-42ea-add1-76fadfb2c5a6
Griffin, Mairead
1490c59b-f193-4787-aa3f-2a2160e80277
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Davies, Elizabeth
411f4910-47b8-42cb-9f83-a7569cf30602
Madden, Peter
93c0041b-851e-4ed3-8d31-76a41115d5fc
Coupland, Victoria
8b3ac151-b485-42ea-add1-76fadfb2c5a6
Griffin, Mairead
1490c59b-f193-4787-aa3f-2a2160e80277
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7

Davies, Elizabeth, Madden, Peter, Coupland, Victoria, Griffin, Mairead and Richardson, Alison (2011) Comparing breast and lung cancer patients' experiences at a UK Cancer centre: implications for improving care and moves towards a person centred model of clinical practice. International Journal of Person Centred Medicine, 1 (1), 177-189.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Patient surveys are increasingly used to obtain feedback about experiences of care to guide changes in the way services are delivered. We compared the experiences of breast and lung cancer patients at diagnosis, in-patient and outpatient care at a Cancer Centre using a locally adapted version of the Picker Institute Cancer Patient Experience Survey. 65% of breast (82/127) and 65% of lung (75/116) cancer patients responded. Both groups reported good experiences at diagnosis, good support from clinical nurse specialists, and had very positive overall views. Breast patients had slightly poorer experiences of hospital stays while lung patients less often received clinical nurse specialist support and information about other support. Both groups reported that written information was not always provided. 84% (132/157) consented to data on the clinical severity of their condition being used to investigate whether this influenced experiences. This study showed that supportive care policies are being implemented at diagnosis and patients value clinical nurse specialist care. Sufficiently large comparative surveys can identify specific areas of performance for services to focus upon in order to improve quality of care. Patients facing poor prognoses can complete surveys and future studies might explore whether disease stage is associated with differing experiences.

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Published date: 2011

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 192509
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/192509
ISSN: 2043-7749
PURE UUID: a619d31b-bed3-4993-8d24-228faa9c6990
ORCID for Alison Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3127-5755

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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2011 08:59
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:34

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Contributors

Author: Elizabeth Davies
Author: Peter Madden
Author: Victoria Coupland
Author: Mairead Griffin

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