The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

P58 anonymous electronic IBD patient service feedback

P58 anonymous electronic IBD patient service feedback
P58 anonymous electronic IBD patient service feedback
Introduction: collecting structured patient feedback is challenging, particularly during the pandemic with many virtual appointments. Our electronic IBD-patient feedback covers outpatient (OP), endoscopy and flare-line experiences.

Methods: IBD patients provide anonymous feedback at the time-of-service contact. GATHER, a survey platform hosted by our institution, collects anonymous information via QR codes (scan QR codes for surveys), electronic links or handheld tablet. Demographics, disease characteristics and medication were noted in all 3 surveys. The OP survey collated clinic type/modality and feedback on individual health care professionals based on an adapted Royal College of Physicians questionnaire as well as preferences for future appointments. Endoscopy surveys gathered information on referral pathway, endoscopy type, treatment advice, length of wait and pre-test information. Flare line surveys allowed individual feedback on IBD nurses, assessed response time and outcomes. Patients’ attitudes regarding use of our online portal My Medical Record (MyMR) were explored. All surveys allowed sign up for MyMR. Patients could leave individual comments.

Results: since September 2021, 425 patients responded. Figure 1 outlines the findings of the surveys. [P58 Figure 1 not included].

Conclusion: electronic surveys are well accepted by our IBD patients and provides useful demographic data. It gives patients the option to inform the service of their preferences for future appointments and allows clinicians to get personal patient feedback for appraisals. Furthermore, it provides feedback on new services such as direct access endoscopy service and the acceptability of patient directed online healthcare (MyMR). Patient-centred feedback enables the user to help shape their future local IBD service.
1468-3288
Downey, Louise
773acab1-0222-4f16-8e9f-03c2e0578e9a
Rahmany, Sohail
9345a4c5-0294-4edf-b8c9-8b88b1627fb7
Stammers, Matthew
a4ad3bd5-7323-4a6d-9c00-2c34f8ae5bd3
Knibbs, Will
275c6a4c-138f-4e03-877f-e387de658a5f
White, Laura
f897f579-dfbe-4828-ba12-e1327f1452fb
Felwick, Richard
b19f1ab6-1de4-4df6-b149-4bc337c3fcb9
Gwiggner, Markus
af72b597-1ead-4155-a25c-0835f7e560c2
Downey, Louise
773acab1-0222-4f16-8e9f-03c2e0578e9a
Rahmany, Sohail
9345a4c5-0294-4edf-b8c9-8b88b1627fb7
Stammers, Matthew
a4ad3bd5-7323-4a6d-9c00-2c34f8ae5bd3
Knibbs, Will
275c6a4c-138f-4e03-877f-e387de658a5f
White, Laura
f897f579-dfbe-4828-ba12-e1327f1452fb
Felwick, Richard
b19f1ab6-1de4-4df6-b149-4bc337c3fcb9
Gwiggner, Markus
af72b597-1ead-4155-a25c-0835f7e560c2

Downey, Louise, Rahmany, Sohail, Stammers, Matthew, Knibbs, Will, White, Laura, Felwick, Richard and Gwiggner, Markus (2022) P58 anonymous electronic IBD patient service feedback. Gut, 71, [A67]. (doi:10.1136/gutjnl-2022-BSG.116).

Record type: Meeting abstract

Abstract

Introduction: collecting structured patient feedback is challenging, particularly during the pandemic with many virtual appointments. Our electronic IBD-patient feedback covers outpatient (OP), endoscopy and flare-line experiences.

Methods: IBD patients provide anonymous feedback at the time-of-service contact. GATHER, a survey platform hosted by our institution, collects anonymous information via QR codes (scan QR codes for surveys), electronic links or handheld tablet. Demographics, disease characteristics and medication were noted in all 3 surveys. The OP survey collated clinic type/modality and feedback on individual health care professionals based on an adapted Royal College of Physicians questionnaire as well as preferences for future appointments. Endoscopy surveys gathered information on referral pathway, endoscopy type, treatment advice, length of wait and pre-test information. Flare line surveys allowed individual feedback on IBD nurses, assessed response time and outcomes. Patients’ attitudes regarding use of our online portal My Medical Record (MyMR) were explored. All surveys allowed sign up for MyMR. Patients could leave individual comments.

Results: since September 2021, 425 patients responded. Figure 1 outlines the findings of the surveys. [P58 Figure 1 not included].

Conclusion: electronic surveys are well accepted by our IBD patients and provides useful demographic data. It gives patients the option to inform the service of their preferences for future appointments and allows clinicians to get personal patient feedback for appraisals. Furthermore, it provides feedback on new services such as direct access endoscopy service and the acceptability of patient directed online healthcare (MyMR). Patient-centred feedback enables the user to help shape their future local IBD service.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: 19 June 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477998
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477998
ISSN: 1468-3288
PURE UUID: 0d2be57c-43b4-4a81-8970-7e4f318f77c0
ORCID for Matthew Stammers: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3850-3116

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 19 Jun 2023 16:46
Last modified: 21 Sep 2024 02:15

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Louise Downey
Author: Sohail Rahmany
Author: Matthew Stammers ORCID iD
Author: Will Knibbs
Author: Laura White
Author: Richard Felwick
Author: Markus Gwiggner

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×