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© 1995 Oxford University Press

research-article

Patients' and Carers' Satisfaction with Acute Stroke Management

IAN WELLWOOD, MARTIN DENNIS and CHARLES WARLOW

Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Western General Hospital Edinburgh EH4 2XU

Address correspondence to Dr M. Dennis

We set out to discover how satisfied patients and carers were with existing stroke services. We prospectively identified 164 consecutive patients admitted to a department of general medicine with acute stroke and collected data using a satisfaction questionnaire in a semi-structured interview. Of the 110 (67%) survivors, 65 (59%) patients and 80 (73%) carers completed an interview. We also interviewed 34 bereaved carers.

Most patients (97%), carers (92%) and bereaved carers (94%) were satisfied with overall care. However, 30 (46%) of our patients, 53 (66%) carers and 18 (53%) bereaved carers who were satisfied with care overall expressed dissatisfaction with at least one component. Carers of patients were significantly more dissatisfied than the patients themselves with the amount of information given and with social work intervention. Carers of patients who were unable to respond to the questionnaire themselves, usually because of cognitive difficulties, were the most dissatisfied group even when compared with bereaved carers.

Measuring satisfaction can alert one to deficiencies within a service, aiding service development, but purchasers and providers of stroke services should be aware of the difficulties and pitfalls in measuring and interpreting patients' and carers' overall satisfaction. Efforts to improve communication, discharge planning and follow-up, aimed at carers as well as the patients themselves, are likely to be rewarded with improved satisfaction with stroke services.

Received May 11, 1995;
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