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What methods do stakeholders prefer for feeding back performance data: a qualitative study in palliative care?

What methods do stakeholders prefer for feeding back performance data: a qualitative study in palliative care?
What methods do stakeholders prefer for feeding back performance data: a qualitative study in palliative care?
Objective. To investigate the opinions of stakeholders (service commissioners and providers) on how performance data should be presented, in order to develop effective feedback methods to facilitate the use of these data in decision making.Design. A qualitative analysis of semi-structured face-to-face and telephone interviews. League tables and fictional box plots were presented as an illustrative guide. The themes covered in the interviews were the effectiveness of these two feedback formats, their positive and negative characteristics, and ideas for new and improved feedback mechanisms.Participants. Thirty-six stakeholders representing a range of clinical and non-clinical roles within palliative care and the wider health care system across a variety of statutory and non-statutory organizations from London and the West Midlands.Results. Box plots were received more positively than league tables, and qualitative information was considered more appropriate than pictorial feedback. Conventional methods such as league tables and box plots were judged to lack essential information on which important decisions could be based, such as additional contextual information and the methodological assumptions of the instrument. Both feedback methods were considered useful as an impetus to further discussion. There was a consensus that feedback should be constructive and able to be adapted to the organizational realities in which UK health services function.Conclusion. Qualitative research was viewed as the right evidence for gaining an understanding of the quality of end of life care. Stakeholders highlighted the importance of the lay perspective, which requires approaches that illuminate the subjective meanings of patient experience.
What methods do stakeholders prefer for feeding back performance data, palliative care
1353-4505
375-381
Gysels, M.
7b6fe560-395e-4657-b1da-95e9965c8e98
Hughes, R.
938ac53c-edfb-4b20-b99b-31e2cbd18768
Aspinal, F.
feaf34ed-bd3a-4e65-966e-e3840c5ed49a
Addington-Hall, J.
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Higginson, I.
2174d6b0-f13e-44ed-b6f6-6ae7142d9a4a
Gysels, M.
7b6fe560-395e-4657-b1da-95e9965c8e98
Hughes, R.
938ac53c-edfb-4b20-b99b-31e2cbd18768
Aspinal, F.
feaf34ed-bd3a-4e65-966e-e3840c5ed49a
Addington-Hall, J.
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Higginson, I.
2174d6b0-f13e-44ed-b6f6-6ae7142d9a4a

Gysels, M., Hughes, R., Aspinal, F., Addington-Hall, J. and Higginson, I. (2004) What methods do stakeholders prefer for feeding back performance data: a qualitative study in palliative care? International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 16 (5), 375-381.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective. To investigate the opinions of stakeholders (service commissioners and providers) on how performance data should be presented, in order to develop effective feedback methods to facilitate the use of these data in decision making.Design. A qualitative analysis of semi-structured face-to-face and telephone interviews. League tables and fictional box plots were presented as an illustrative guide. The themes covered in the interviews were the effectiveness of these two feedback formats, their positive and negative characteristics, and ideas for new and improved feedback mechanisms.Participants. Thirty-six stakeholders representing a range of clinical and non-clinical roles within palliative care and the wider health care system across a variety of statutory and non-statutory organizations from London and the West Midlands.Results. Box plots were received more positively than league tables, and qualitative information was considered more appropriate than pictorial feedback. Conventional methods such as league tables and box plots were judged to lack essential information on which important decisions could be based, such as additional contextual information and the methodological assumptions of the instrument. Both feedback methods were considered useful as an impetus to further discussion. There was a consensus that feedback should be constructive and able to be adapted to the organizational realities in which UK health services function.Conclusion. Qualitative research was viewed as the right evidence for gaining an understanding of the quality of end of life care. Stakeholders highlighted the importance of the lay perspective, which requires approaches that illuminate the subjective meanings of patient experience.

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More information

Published date: 2004
Keywords: What methods do stakeholders prefer for feeding back performance data, palliative care

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 9620
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/9620
ISSN: 1353-4505
PURE UUID: bff79a6f-73df-4d5c-b8c9-a45dc21ddfe9

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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2004
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 12:47

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Contributors

Author: M. Gysels
Author: R. Hughes
Author: F. Aspinal
Author: I. Higginson

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