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Patient and Carer Experience report Quarter 4 January to March 2016 1

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Page 1: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Patient and Carer Experience report

Quarter 4 – January to March 2016

1

Page 2: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Patient Advice and Liaison Service (PALS) Report

2

In quarter 4, PALS received 798 enquiries. This is a notable increase

from the same quarter last year when 630 enquiries were received.

The number of issues requiring resolution has decreased, however

increasing numbers of patients/carers are requesting information,

advice and sign-posting.

Staff across the hospital receive written compliments, from patients and

their carers and families, in the form of letters, cards and notes. Whilst

they are not recorded centrally, the ones received by PALS are. In

quarter 4, the PALS service received 74 compliments. Of these, 62

compliments were regarding staff attitude and behaviour across 14

areas in the Trust. 17 compliments regarding attitude and behaviour

referred specifically to staff in the Emergency Department. Below are

some example comments:

• My aunt … said to me how very ‘kind and patient’ everyone on

the staff were towards her (relative of a medical patient)

• I felt cared for (medical patient)

• My progress through the diagnostic process in the urology

department and then the treatment process in the radiotherapy

department could not have been smoother (surgical patient)

• The Midwives and Maternity Care Assistants are a credit to the

Trust. They were forever attentive with a smile and nothing

could be too much trouble; in fact they actively encouraged us

to call more! (Women and Children's)

Compliments received through PALS

Page 3: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Patient Advice and Liaison Service (PALS) Report

3

Communication and information

Issues regarding communication and information continue to be the

main subject requiring resolution this quarter.

18 of the 89 contacts (20.2%) about communication and information

were in relation to difficulties in accessing Trust outpatient services and

appointment offices by telephone. This is a decrease from quarter 3

which was 36 of the 134 contacts (26.8%).

In particular, patients have had difficulty accessing the Pain Clinic by

telephone, with 8 patients contacting PALS. 5 RNHRD patients

reported difficulties in accessing the site in January and February,

however no patients reported difficulties in March. The other contacts

reporting difficulties in accessing services by telephone were shared

across 4 other outpatient departments.

A member of the Patient Experience Team attends the Outpatient

Steering Group and presents the themes and trends in patient and

carer experience to inform discussions and identify areas of

improvement.

The themes from PALS contacts will be used to support improvements

in outpatient communication which has been identified as a Trust

quarterly account priority in 2016/17.

Appointments

Of the 61 contacts about appointments 46 (75.4%) were regarding delays in outpatient appointments, none can be attributed to a particular

hospital service. The other contacts were regarding patients who had forgotten appointment dates or wanting to change appointment dates.

Care and treatment

There are no themes in the 29 contacts regarding care and treatment that can be attributed to a particular hospital service.

Top three subjects requiring resolution

Page 4: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Friends and Family Test (FFT) responses

4

Response total for all services

During quarter 4 we received a total of 7625 Friends and Family Test

responses. This has increased from quarter 3 where the total was

7024. The distribution for quarter 4 across Trust services is as

follows:

Inpatient 2975 39%

Emergency Department inc: MAU & SAU 1265 16.5%

Outpatients 2728 36%

Maternity Services 657 8.5%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

ExtremelyLikely

Likely NeitherLikely orUnlikely

ExtremelyUnlikely

Unlikely Don'tknow.

Quarter 4 Trust Response Totals

Total

83% (6,333) would be Extremely Likely to recommend the Trust to

Friends and Family if they needed similar care or treatment. This

remains the same as in quarter 3.

Changes in recording and reporting on FFT and surveys

Information, collected from patients via FFT and patient experience

surveys, was previously ‘recorded’ within ‘Meridian’. However, as part

of ongoing work to integrate data collection and management tools,

Meridian was replaced by a new in-house system called ‘eQuest’ this

quarter.

From January 14th FFT responses were entered onto eQuest and

from 31st March all other Meridian services ceased.

This has caused some temporary disruption during quarter 4 whilst

surveys from Meridian were built within the new application. The

Business Intelligence Unit are continuing to develop the reporting

capability of patient experience to wards and departments through the

ward dashboard.

Due to the change from Meridian to eQuest, there is a small

discrepancy in the response totals due to a rounding error in excel

which cannot be adjusted. There is a discrepancy of 6 responses

between the monthly board reports and this quarterly report.

Page 5: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Friends and Family Test (FFT) responses

5

Changes in Analysis of FFT free text comments

FFT cards provide respondents with the opportunity to give more

detailed information about their experiences in the form of written

comments.

With the implementation of eQuest the quantitative data (comments)

received for February and March have been assigned ‘sentiments’ -

Positive, Neutral, Negative and broad categories/ themes - Attitudes

and Behaviours, Care and Treatment, Communication, Cleanliness,

Facilities, Food, Timeliness, Resources and Over-all Experience. If

required, comments have been assigned more than one sentiment or

category/theme. This facility was not available when using Meridian for

January comments. If the category/theme does not appear on a chart

this indicates there were no comments related to them.

The following is a brief overview of the broad categories, including

some examples of the types of comments that could go into a

category and some sample comments:

Attitudes and behaviour – (Comments about any/all staff/

volunteers) ‘staff kind’, ‘team were professional’, ‘member of staff was

rude’.

Care and treatment – (Comments relate to quality of the overall

care/treatment) ‘well looked after’, ‘excellent care’, ‘I got left on a

commode for an hour’, ‘range of tests and overall thoroughness was/

is very impressive’.

Cleanliness – (Comments about the cleanliness of buildings,

rooms, equipment, staff, hospital grounds) ‘clean and fresh

environment’, ‘poor hand hygiene’.

Communication - (Comments about written, telephone and face

to face communication) ‘all information given in a clear manner’,

‘kept informed’, ‘told one thing and then they change their minds’,

‘explanation comprehensive’, ‘had to wait for appointment’.

Facilities – (Comments about buildings, wards, rooms,

environment including noise/ lights, accessibility, decor)

‘playroom was my favourite’, ‘no hot water in washbasin’,

‘parking dreadful’.

Food – (Comments about food) ‘food was excellent’, ‘a bit more

variety on the food menu front’.

Resources - (Comments about staffing levels, general

comments about staff, equipment) ‘staff are lovely’, ‘amazing

staff all around’, ‘everyone excellent’, ‘staff brilliant but

understaffed’, ‘too few staff’, ‘lots of lovely toys’.

Timeliness – (Comments about waiting, being seen quickly,

prompt treatment) ‘treatment was very swift’, ‘no time waiting’,

‘wait for medicine’, ‘respond quicker to the call button’,

‘appointment can take months’.

Overall experience – (Comments about overall experience)

‘good all around’, ‘perfect’, ‘it was ok’.

Page 6: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Friends and Family Test (FFT) responses – Inpatient

6

Inpatient Experience

The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and

behaviour of ward and support staff. The largest proportion of

compliments refer to the attitudes and behaviour of ward and

support staff e.g.

‘Everything was excellent, your colleagues have without exception

been courteous, thoughtful and reassuring. All information given was

excellent’

‘The staff have been absolutely wonderful, totally dedicated,

kind and understanding. It's been a very rewarding experience

to see saints at work!’

Care and Treatment is the next largest area of compliments e.g.

‘Very good care’

‘Treatment excellent, nursing very good’

Analysis of inpatient comments shows the overall theme for areas to

improve as ‘resources’ :– The largest proportion of the comments

refer to staffing levels e.g.

‘When short staffed difficult to get hold of a nurse’

‘Staffing levels at times poor’

‘Timeliness’ and ‘facilities’ are the next significant areas to

improve:- the largest proportion of comments within timeliness refer

to waiting for call bells to be answered, waiting for pharmacy and

waiting to be discharged e.g.

‘Respond quicker to the call button’ ‘Most satisfactory, except time

waiting, so long for pharmacy before discharge’

0100200300400500600700800900

Inpatient FFT Theme Totals

Positive

Neutral

Negative

The largest proportion of comments within facilities refer to the lack

of/condition of toilets, poor condition of bathrooms and noise levels

from equipment, noise from other patients and noise levels at night.

Further analysis of quarter 4 comments related to bathrooms shows

that these comments were received across 10 different areas,

however 4 comments related to the bathroom facilities on the

Cardiac Ward. This feedback requires further exploration and will be

a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s patient experience

surveys starting in quarter 1 2016/17.

Page 7: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Friends and Family Test (FFT) responses – Emergency Department and Maternity

7

Emergency Department (inc MAU & SAU) Experience

The majority of ED patient comments relate to the attitudes and behaviour of

staff working within ED. The largest proportion of compliments refer to

attitudes and behaviour of staff e.g.

‘Honestly, the people skills from staff are so lovely and

make people feel valued, listened to and with

lots of empathy shown, thanks so much’

Care and Treatment is the next largest area of compliments e.g.

‘Excellent attention, thorough examination and observation, well done!’

Analysis of ED comments shows the overall theme for areas to improve as

‘timeliness’ waiting times, however positive comments outweigh the negative

comments e.g.

‘Very quick and professional response’

Maternity Services Experience

The majority of Maternity service comments refer to the attitudes and

behaviour of staff working across the service – Antenatal, Labour

wards/Birthing Centres, Postnatal Wards and Postnatal Community support.

The largest proportion of compliments refer to the attitudes and

behaviour of staff e.g.

‘Very helpful friendly staff who are patient and caring.

Felt very comfortable here’

Care and Treatment is the next largest area of compliments e.g.

‘Care was excellent for mother and baby’

Analysis of comments show the overall theme for areas to improve as

Facilities:- Difficulty parking – Antenatal Clinic (RUH) continues from

quarter 3 e.g.

‘Over 30 minute queue to park car, so 5 minutes late for appointment

despite allowing extra time for parking. Extremely stressful’

020406080

100120140160180

Maternity Services FFT Theme Totals

Positive

Neutral

Negative0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

Emergency Department FFT Theme Totals

Positive

Neutral

Negative

Page 8: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Friends and Family Test (FFT) responses - Outpatients

Outpatient Experience

The majority of Outpatient comments refer to the attitudes and

behaviour of staff working within outpatient departments across the

Trust.

The largest proportion of compliments refer to attitudes and

behaviour of staff e.g.

‘Everyone was really friendly and supportive.

Made me feel better and safe’

‘I brought my mother in today, the staff were amazing, considerate,

kind and had real empathy. Exceeded my expectation. Thank you’

Overall experience is the next largest area of compliments e.g.

‘Very good service’

Analysis of comments shows the overall themes for Areas to improve

are Timeliness - Waiting times in clinic areas, e.g.

‘Bit of a long wait,1 hour 10 minutes’

In addition, Facilities - Difficulty Parking, e.g.

‘Absolutely no parking, drove around for 30 minutes’

These themes continue from quarter 3.

8

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

Outpatient FFT Theme Totals

Positive

Neutral

Negative

In conjunction with improving outpatient communication, a week long

event called “The Outpatient 15 steps challenge” will be undertaken in

the summer. Each outpatient department will undertake an

assessment together with patient representatives of every aspect of

the department. The “15 steps challenge” concept is derived from the

NHS Innovation and Improvement’s productive care work stream.

From car parking, signage and the welcome from the receptionist, to

the level of clinical care provided during a consultation – the whole

patient pathway during an appointment will be reviewed from a patient

perspective. During the week, full support will be provided to the

outpatient areas from estates and IT to fix problems first hand.

Page 9: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Patient Experience Surveys – Inpatient and Outpatient

The overall percentage of patients that rated their care as ‘Very Good’ or ‘Excellent’ in quarter 4 was 93% (539). This has decreased

slightly from 96% (556) in quarter 3. The percentage displayed on the chart for Inpatients, is a combined score for inpatient and inpatient

carer surveys.

The total number of outpatient surveys completed in quarter 4 was 176. The total number of inpatient and inpatient carer surveys

completed in quarter 4 was 408.

During 2016 the Patient Experience Team will work with the Heads of Nursing and Matrons to review patient and carer experience surveys.

Historically the national patient experience surveys have been used as a basis for the in-house surveys, however these are lengthy and do

not focus on the areas patients and carers are telling us are important to them. The Patient Experience Team will support Heads of Nursing

and Matrons to develop a rota of short surveys focussing on e.g. privacy and dignity, communication and information, carer support, etc.

Results from the findings of these surveys will be included in future Patient Experience reports. 9

84

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88

90

92

94

96

98

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May

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Jun

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Jul-

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Sep

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Oct

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Jan

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Feb

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Mar

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Percentage of patients and carers who rated the care received as 'Very Good' or 'Excellent'

Inpatients

Outpatient

Overall

0

50

100

150

200

250

Ap

r-1

5

May

-15

Jun

-15

Jul-

15

Au

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5

Sep

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5

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Jan

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Feb

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Mar

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Nu

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Total number of Patient Experience Surveys Completed

Inpatients

Outpatient

Page 10: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Patient Experience Surveys – Performance Maps

Performance Maps – created from data in the Meridian System

Each point plotted on the map represents an individual question, it shows the relative importance and rating of each question to the

inpatients/carers/outpatients that completed a survey in Quarter 4 and a relative measure of the Trust’s strong and weak performance

against those questions.

The importance rating is a score between 0 and 1 with zero meaning least important and 1 meaning most important. In general terms, the

further to the right a point is, the more important it is to the service user. Those points towards the left of the chart are less important. The

vertical axis gives the score for the point so the higher the point, the higher the score.

• Points shown in the top right quadrant are very important to service users and the Trust is scoring well on these

• Points in the bottom right quadrant are important to service users, but the Trust is not scoring as well on them – these are key areas to

focus on

• Points in the top left quadrant are less important and the Trust is scoring well

• Points in the bottom left quadrant are less important to service users but the trust is not scoring well – these should be secondary areas

to focus on

• The Meridian Performance Map uses a recognised statistical tool (Regression Analysis) to compare the results for selected scoring

questions in each questionnaire to the overall level of satisfaction in the questionnaire

• Each questionnaire requires a ‘seed’ or ‘key’ question, which is a general question providing a benchmark for the overall level of

satisfaction in the questionnaire. Examples of ‘seed’ or ‘key’ questions would be:

“Overall, how would you rate the care you received?”

10

Page 11: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Inpatient Survey Performance Map – Based on 327 Surveys

Primary Strengths upper right quadrant, areas that are important to

patients and where patients have rated the Trust highly.

Q8. On the whole, are the staff kind and friendly?

Of the 327 inpatients that completed the survey 92.35% responded

‘yes definitely’.

‘They were very friendly and welcoming and kept me up to date at every

stage of my visit’

‘Can't speak too highly of them. Go above and beyond, lots’

The other questions in this quadrant are:

Q13. In your opinion, how clean is the hospital room or ward you

are in?

Q17. Were you told who to contact if you were worried about your

condition after you left hospital?

Q14. How clean are the toilets and bathrooms that you use in this

ward?

Primary Weaknesses – lower right quadrant, less important to

patients and where patients have rated the Trust less highly.

Question 11 has the lowest score in this quadrant.

Q11. How would you rate the hospital food?

35.78% rated the food as very good, 35.78% rated the food as good,

11.31% rated the food as fair and 5.81% rated the food as poor

(11.31% responded that they did not have food – nil by mouth, etc).

Question 9 is as equally important to patients as question 11 in this

quadrant, but does have a higher score.

Q9. Did you find someone on the hospital staff to talk to about

your worries and fears?

57.49% responded ‘Yes, definitely, 18.65% responded ‘Yes, to some

extent’, 6.73% responded ‘No’ and 17.13% responded ‘I have no

worries and fears’

Secondary Strengths – upper left quadrant where patients have rated

the Trust highly but are calculated as less important to them.

Q18. During this most recent hospital stay on this ward, have you

shared a sleeping area with patients of the opposite sex?

Secondary Weaknesses – lower left quadrant where patients have

rated the Trust less highly but are rated as less important to patients.

Q10. Were you involved in decisions about your care and

treatment?

Q12. Did you get enough help from staff to eat your meals?

Q16. If you have been given your medication to take home were

you told about medication side effects to watch for? 11

Page 12: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Outpatient Survey Performance Map – Based on 176 Surveys

Primary Weaknesses – lower right quadrant, areas that are important

to patients and where patients have not rated outpatient services

highly.

There are no Primary Weaknesses for quarter 4.

Secondary Strengths – upper left quadrant where patients have rated

the Trust highly but rated as less important to patients.

Q10. Do you feel you were given enough notice for this appointment?

Q8. Have you had any issues with telephone contact with the RUH

for this appointment?

Q11. Once you arrived at the hospital, was it easy to find your way to

this department or clinic?

Secondary Weaknesses – lower left quadrant - questions that

patients have rated the Trust less highly and are calculated as less

important to patients.

As there are no Primary weaknesses, responses to Question 15 are

the lowest scoring and most important question to patients shown in

this quadrant.

Q15. If you were kept waiting more than 15 minutes were you

made aware of how long you would have to wait to be

seen? 8.43% responded ‘Yes’, 11.24% responded ‘No’ and

80.34% responded ‘N/A’.

Q9. Were you given a choice of appointment times?

Q13. In the reception area, could other patients overhear what you

talked about with the receptionist?

Primary Strengths – upper right quadrant, areas that are important to

patients and where patients have rated outpatient services highly.

As in quarter 3, Q16, Q17 and Q12 continue to be the primary

strengths in quarter 4.

Q17. Do you feel you were given enough time during this

appointment to discuss your queries or concerns?

Of the 176 outpatients that completed the Survey 94.94% responded

‘Yes definitely’

‘Staff very reassuring and kind. Helped me with my anxieties’

Q12. Do you feel you were greeted promptly and courteously on arrival

for this appointment?

Q16. In your opinion, how clean is this waiting room/treatment area? 12

Page 13: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Inpatient Carer Survey Performance Map – Based on 81 Surveys

Secondary Strengths – upper left quadrant areas where patients

have rated the Trust highly but are rated as less important to them.

Q8 has moved from a primary strength in quarter 3 to a secondary

strength in quarter 4.

Q8. Have the staff made you feel welcome on the ward?

Of the 81 carers that completed the survey 95.06% responded

‘Yes definitely’, they had been made to feel welcome.

‘So warm and welcoming. Reassuring too’

Q9. Have you been as involved as you would like with the patient's

care during their hospital stay?

Secondary Weaknesses – lower left quadrant where patients

have rated the Trust less highly and areas that are rated as less

important to patients.

Q12. Have you been involved with discharge planning for when

the patient leaves hospital ?

Q10. Do you feel the doctors take enough time to talk with you

about the patient's care?

Q11. Have the staff on the ward pro-actively approached you to

communicate with you as a carer for the patient?

Involving patients and carers in the discharge planning process is

included in the Discharge Project and with the development of the

Discharge Passport. Scoping is also underway this year to develop

a carers policy and carers passport which will be developed by

carers and recognises their contribution to the care of their loved

one.

Primary Strengths – upper right quadrant, areas that are important to

patients and where patients have rated the Trust highly.

There are no Primary strengths in quarter 4.

Primary Weaknesses – upper left quadrant where patients have rated

the Trust highly but these areas are rated as less important to patients.

Q14. Have the staff talked with you to explain about the patient's

medication, including potential side effects? 4.94% responded ‘Yes,

completely’, 2.47% ‘Yes, to some extent’, 3.7% ‘No’ , 88.89% ‘Don’t

know’.

There are no comments to support this percentage and it is uncertain

whether it indicates that the carer has not been talked to yet or if the

carer has selected this response to represent not applicable.

13

Page 14: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Same-sex accommodation

(123 ratings)

Quarter 4: Patient and Carer Experience Report – NHS Choices and Patient Opinion Websites

NHS Choices website reviews from patients and their carers (Patient Opinion covers the same reviews as posted on NHS Choices)

During quarter 4, 14 patients provided feedback about RUH services, received during January, February and March 2016, through NHS

Choices reviews and ratings:

Ten of the 12, who rated the hospital using the star system, rated it as the top five stars – of these five were in reference to the Emergency

Department – and one each regarding Oncology, ENT, SAU, Maternity and Pulteney Ward.

Of the ten five star rated comments eight were regarding staff attitude and behaviour and two about the care and treatment provided:

The patient and staff interface was really exceptional and I would say way above expectations in such a busy environment, and it

was busy. Thank you. (ED Patient)

Although working under immense pressure, they (both doctors and support staff) remained positive, cheerful, calm and caring and

a credit to their profession. (ED Patient)

Every single person who looked after me were totally profession, caring, explained what was happening and were reassuring. I

cannot thank everyone enough for their support. (RUH Patient)

Of the four ratings below five stars: two had not rated as the comments had been pulled through from Patient Opinion Website and two

reviewers had rated the Trust with one star. Of these two: on reading one comment it was an extremely positive review and it is possible this

was rated incorrectly, the other comment referred to a patient’s observations of the Emergency Department, although there was no negative

comment about their own treatment, which they referred to as adequate.

Based on 156 ratings for this hospital (snapshot as of 25/04/2016)

Cleanliness

(150 ratings)

Staff co-operation

(153 ratings)

Dignity and respect

(155 ratings)

Involvement in decisions

(152 ratings)

14

Page 15: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Patient and Carer Experience activities across the Trust

T)F

Friends and Family Test (FF Friends and Family Test (FFT) T)

National Spotlight on Friends and Family Test week at the RUH

During 14th – 18th March the Trust took part in the National Friends and

Family Test (FFT) spotlight week. The Patient Experience Team hosted

an information stand outside the Lansdown restaurant to raise

awareness of FFT with patients, visitors and staff and to collect

comments about their experiences of the RUH:

I was looked after so well in the Gynaecology Department. I would

recommend this department to everyone.

Staff are helpful and kind. Thank you for looking after me.

Urology Outpatients rock! Very good team.

Lansdown restaurant first class.

Excellent staff.

Fabulous staff doing

fabulous work. Thank you.

The staff always make me

feel special.

X-ray porters are excellent.

Celebrating what patients tell us about our staff through the

Friends and Family Test (FFT)

Posters were developed for the National FFT spotlight week to

identify the overwhelmingly positive words that patients are using to

describe RUH staff when providing feedback through FFT.

These words were used to design positive presentation posters for

wards, outpatient departments (Specialty), maternity services and

the emergency department. Matrons presented the posters to staff to

celebrate the work that staff do and the benefits it has on a positive

patient experience.

15

Page 16: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Patient and Carer Experience activities across the Trust

T)F

Friends and Family Test (FF Friends and Family Test (FFT) T)

Patient Experience Matters

The Patient Experience Team have produced posters for inpatient wards, outpatient departments, the emergency department and maternity

services; these are displayed in appropriate areas for patients and staff to access them. They communicate what patients are telling the Trust

about what is positive about their experiences, what they suggest the Trust could improve and what the Trust has done to improve services in

response to patient experience feedback. This will be repeated every quarter.

16

Page 17: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4 Complaints Report – numbers received

17

Formal complaints received in Q4, 2015/16

In Q4 the Trust received 66 formal complaints:

30 (45%) Medical Division

25 (38%) Surgical Division

11 (17%) Women and Children’s Division

Number of complaints by Quarter/Year

The average per month for the rolling year is 25.

There was an increase in the number of complaints in January.

2 relate to care given in 2012 and 15 to care given between

October and December 2015. The rest relate to care given in

January 2016.

Year Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total

2012/13 87 74 91 120 372

2013/14 110 117 97 61 385

2014/15 86 81 75 68 310

2015/16 100 82 55 66 303

10

20

30

40

Nu

mb

er

of

com

pla

ints

Total number of complaints received

Number of complaints received Trendline

Of the 29 complaints received in January, 14 relate to care

given in December and January 2016. 13 of these relate to

events on days when the hospital was in black escalation.

The table above shows there is no significant change in the number

of formal complaints received in Q4 compared to the same quarter in

2014/15. Although there is a 20% increase between Q3 and Q4 in

2015/16, the overall number of complaints for the year has remained

stable.

Page 18: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Complaint by subject

18

Complaints by subject

The table below details the subject of formal complaints in Q4.

The following tables provide a further breakdown of the above

complaint subjects.

Complaints- Subjects Number

All aspects of clinical treatment 39

Communication/information to patients

(written and oral) 10

Attitude of staff 7

Admissions, discharge and transfer arrangements 5

Appointments, delay/cancellation (out-patient) 3

Personal records 2

Total 66

All aspects of clinical treatment Q4 Number

Inappropriate care and treatment 20

General enquiry - clinical care 12

Co-ordination of medical treatment 2

End of life care concerns 2

Competence/knowledge of staff 1

Error in performing a procedure on patient 1

Invasive procedure carried out 1

Total 39

Communication /Information to patients Number

Lack of a clear explanation 3

Inappropriate/inaccurate/incomplete correspondence 2

Inappropriate/Insensitive communication/attitude 2

General Enquiry - Communication 2

Safeguarding procedure/concerns 1

Total 10

Admissions, discharge and transfer arrangements Number

Cancellation of admission 1

Delay in discharge 1

Inappropriate/Insensitive communication/attitude 1

Inappropriate/unsafe Discharge 1

Misunderstanding 1

Total 5

Personal records Number

Data protection breach/confidentiality breach 1

Inappropriate/inaccurate/incomplete correspondence 1

Total 2

Page 19: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Complaints Report – Complaint by subject and response rate

19

Division Number

Medical 5

Surgical 22

Women & children 10

Total closed eligible for 25 day target 37

It is disappointing that of the 37 complaints detailed above, 5 (13%) of

the 37 were responded to within the timeframe. 13 (35%) were

responded to between 0-30 days and 24 (65%) between 0-40 days.

The remainder exceeded 40 days.

Work is continuing with the Divisions to identify the causes of delays

and to improve performance against the target using tracking and

weekly Datix reports.

Attitude of Staff Number

Staff attitude 5

Disinterested/uncaring 1

Inappropriate/unsafe Discharge 1

Total 7

Appointments, delay / cancellation Number

Appointment information, date, time, location 1

Length of time for new appointment 1

Misunderstanding 1

Total 3

Complaint by subject continued

Where patients/carers have made a formal complaint, if the response

is delayed, contact is made by the Division and a later date for the

response is agreed. The tables opposite show the response both

within a 25 and 40 day timescale.

Responses within agreed deadlines Q4

50 complaints were closed in Q4.

39 were considered as Grade 2.

Grade 2 complaints are subject to a local target response of 25

working days. Complaints where the response is delayed due to

waiting for information from other organisations and resolution via

meetings are excluded (2). Therefore, 37 complaints were subject

to the 25 working day target this quarter. This is shown in the table

below.

Page 20: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Complaints Report – Complaint by subject and Response rate

0

1

2

3

4

5

Ap

r-1

5

May

-15

Jun

-15

Jul-

15

Au

g-1

5

Sep

-15

Oct

-15

No

v-1

5

De

c-1

5

Jan

-16

Feb

-16

Mar

-16

Re-opened complaints for the past twelve months

Total number of re-opened complaints

Number of re-opened formedicine

Number of re-opened forsurgery

Number of re-opened forWomen & Children

Reopened complaints in Q4 2015/16

Ten complaints were reopened in Q4 2015/16; 4 for the Medical

Division, 2 for the Surgical Division and 4 for the Women and

Children’s Division. Q3 and Q4 saw an increase in the number of

reopened complaints compared to Q1 and Q2. The cases have been

reviewed. On initial review, patients/carers presented further

questions linked to their original concern or they disagreed with the

response and accepted the offer to meet.

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

Surgery Medicine Women & children

Per

cen

tage

wit

hin

25

day

s

Division

Within 25 working days grade 2 complaints %

Within 25working daysgrade 2complaints %

Total: Surgery: 0 Medicine: 2 Women & Children: 3

54565860626466687072

Surgery Medicine Women &childrenP

erce

nta

ge w

ith

in 4

0 d

ays

Division

Within 40 working days grade 2 complaints %

Within 40 working daysgrade 2 complaints %

Total: Surgery: 14 Medicine: 3 Women & Children: 7

20 20

Page 21: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Learning and service improvement from complaints/PALS/FFT feedback

21

Issue Division Lessons learned

Patient anxious and requested an elective caesarean

section however this was declined. Patient felt that

the doctor lacked compassion and emotional

empathy.

Women

and

Children

Concerns were discussed as part of teaching and appraisal process to

ensure similar situations do not occur in the future for other expectant

mothers.

Unacceptable wait for operation which was then

cancelled and a further long wait for rebook.

Women

and

Children

Initial communication was identified as causing the issues raised.

Apology given and appointment expedited. Explanation given to the

patient who was satisfied with the outcome.

Maternity patient went home with catheter and no

advice on its management/care was given and the

patient experienced problems.

Women

and

Children

Equipment starter packs now available so that all women going home

with a catheter will have the correct equipment and advice.

Delays reported by parents in the Paediatric

Assessment Unit waiting for their children to be seen.

Women

and

Children

Measures to improve patient flow include – review working patterns

and availability of medical and nursing staff to improve communication

between staff. The team have developed a nurse-led discharge

proforma and an information leaflet for parents.

A parent raised a concern that breast-feeding mums

were missing meals on the Neonatal Intensive Care

Unit (NICU)

Women

and

Children

Staff now offer meals to mums with babies on NICU

Page 22: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Quarter 4: Learning and service improvement (continued)

22

Issue Division Lessons learned

Patient had suffered a fracture. Family concerned

that discharge occurred without rehabilitation and

there was no attention made to the patients ongoing

medical needs. Patient subsequently fell at home.

Medical

Division

Appropriate assessments had been carried out. It was identified

that the communication with the family regarding discharge

expectations and ongoing management could have been more

comprehensive. This was discussed with the ward team.

Relative was unhappy that they had not been

informed of the patient’s arrival and subsequent

transfer from the Emergency Department to a ward.

Medical

Division

A project is being undertaken by a senior nurse to ensure that

current procedures are strengthened and nursing/medical staff

are asked the question on Millennium ‘whether relatives have

been informed’.

Patients not always aware whether our menu

options contain gluten.

Corporate Updated food labels to include the nationally recognised gluten-

free sign to help people recognise gluten free food.

Parent unhappy about the dental treatment her son

received.

Surgical

Division

Head of service has ensured that all staff are made aware of the

importance of providing realistic timescales regarding the length

of anaesthetic and return to ward, and that all the relevant

information is given to the patient or their relative at the point of

discharge.

Page 23: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Complaints Report Q4 – Complaint subject

23

Quarter 4 Complaints by ward/area

The table opposite shows the ward areas for the complaints

received in Q4. It should be noted that the complaint is

allocated to the location of the patient at the time of the

incident and may not be specifically about the care given in

that area.

Outpatient service complaints

27% (18) of the complaints received in Q4 relate to

outpatient services. The number of complaints has

remained stable throughout 2015/16.

17% (3) related to the Medical Division, 55% (10) related to

the Surgical Division and 28% (5) related to Women and

children’s Division.

Top Subjects of Outpatient complaints

The top three subjects (15 complaints in total) for outpatient

complaints across all Divisions remains the same as quarter

2 and 3 - clinical care and concerns, communication and

information and appointments.

Ward Area Subject Number

ACE OPU Clinical Care and Concerns 2

Discrimination and Safeguarding 1

Acute Stroke Unit Clinical Care and Concerns 2

Charlotte Ward Communication and Information 1

Critical Care Services (ITU) Clinical Care and Concerns 1

Emergency Clinical Care and Concerns 1

Forrester Brown Ward Clinical Care and Concerns 2

Communication and Information 1

Haygarth Clinical Care and Concerns 2

Mary Ward Clinical Care and Concerns 2

Communication and Information 1

Medical Short Stay Communication and Information 1

Parry Ward Communication and Information 1

Philip Yeoman Ward Clinical Care and Concerns 1

Pulteney Clinical Care and Concerns 1

Communication and Information 1

Respiratory Ward Clinical Care and Concerns 1

Robin Smith Communication and Information 1

Surgical Admissions Unit Clinical Care and Concerns 1

Staff Attitude and Behaviour 1

Surgical Short Stay

Admissions/transfers/discharge procedure

(Inpatients/ED) 1

Clinical Care and Concerns 1

William Budd Ward

Admissions/transfers/discharge procedure

(Inpatients/ED) 1

Total 28

Page 24: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Complaints Report Q3 – Complaints in relation to activity

24

These charts show the numbers of complaints in relation to activity

per 10,000 contacts.

The complaint trend for the Surgical and the Medical Division has

decreased against activity in quarter 4.

The complaint rate in the Women and Children’s Division also

shows a decrease in the complaint rate at the end of quarter 4

compared to quarter 2.

The complaint rate in March is the lowest rate seen through 2015/16

at 2.5 per 10,000 contacts with the yearly rate high seen in April

2015 at 6.8 per 10,000 contacts.

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

22000

23000

24000

25000

26000

27000

28000

Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar

2015/2016

Medical Division - Complaints in relation to Activity (rate per 10,000 Contacts)

Medicine Complaints Medicine Activity Medicine Complaints Rate

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

02468

101214

Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar

2015/2016

Surgical Division - Complaints in relation to Activity (rate per 10,000 Contacts)

Surgical Complaints Surgery Complaints Rate Surgery Activity

9500100001050011000115001200012500

0

2

4

6

8

Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar

2015/2016

Women's and Children's Division- Complaints in relation to Activity (rate per 10,000 Contacts)

Women & Children Complaints Women & Children Complaints Rate

Women & Children Activity

Page 25: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Complaints Report Q4: Parliamentary Health Service Ombudsman and Patient Survey

25

National PHSO Complaints about Acute Trusts Q3 2015/16

In Q3 the PHSO received 2621 new complaints about NHS acute Trusts in England. This compares to 2658 received by the PHSO in Q2.

In Q3 804 of the complaints received were assessed and 331 of these were passed to stage 3 for formal investigation,

48% of the complaints investigated were upheld in Q3. Comparison of complaint numbers between Trusts should be treated with caution as the

activity levels of Trusts have not been taken into account.

The table below shows PHSO investigations for Q3 2015/16 for the RUH and other local Trusts. The PHSO have

confirmed that there were 2 complaints fully or partially upheld in 2015/16. They are to amend their records.

Acute Trust Complaints received by PHSO

Complaints PHSO accepted for investigation

Investigations fully or partially upheld

Investigations not upheld

Q3

20

14-1

5

Q4 2

014-1

5

Q1

20

15-1

6

Q2

20

15-1

6

Q3

20

15-1

6

Q3

20

14-1

5

Q4

20

14-1

5

Q1

20

15-1

6

Q2

20

15-1

6

Q3

20

15-1

6

Q3

20

14-1

5

Q4

20

14-1

5

Q1

20

15-1

6

Q2

20

15-1

6

Q3

20

15-1

6

Q3

20

14-1

5

Q4

20

14-1

5

Q1

20

15-1

6

Q2

20

15-1

6

Q3

20

15-1

6

Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust 9 4 7 7 6 3 2 2 0 2 0 1 0 1 3 2 0 1 2 0

Salisbury NHS Foundation Trust 6 5 4 3 3 3 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0

Taunton and Somerset NHS Foundation Trust 3 9 6 2 9 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1

Weston Area Health NHS Trust 10 4 4 4 8 3 2 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1

Yeovil District Hospital NHS Foundation Trust 2 3 2 0 4 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

Page 26: Patient and Carer Experience report€¦ · Inpatient Experience The majority of inpatient comments relate to the attitude and ... a point of focus in the developing of the Matron’s

Complaints Report Q4: Parliamentary Health Service Ombudsman and Patient Survey

Investigations by the Parliamentary and Health Service

Ombudsman (PHSO) in Q4, 2015/16 for RUH

The Trust has 10 cases open with the PHSO at present.

2 cases remain open from Q3 2015/16.

8 new cases were opened in Q4 2015/16.

Of the 8 new cases, 1 relates to several episodes of care the

patient received between 2011 and 2014; 1 to care given in 2012;

1 to care given in 2013 and 5 to care given in 2015. 4 of the new

cases have been brought by relatives of patients regarding care

and treatment options that they feel had a negative impact on the

patient’s outcome. These 4 cases have been passed to the

relevant team for review.

Quarter Complaints

received

Accepted for

Investigation

Partially or

fully upheld

Not

upheld

Q3 2014-15 9 3 0 2

Q4 2014-15 4 2 1 0

Q1 2015-16 7 2 0 1

Q2 2015-16 7 0 1 2

Q3 2015-16 6 2 3 0

PHSO Q3 Summary for RUH

The table opposite shows the number of complaints received by the

PHSO, numbers investigated and the conclusions reached.

It should be noted that three phases reported (received, investigated

and concluded) may not relate to the same quarter, due to the length of

time taken to investigate each complaint.

Complaint Survey of patients and families who have had

cause to complain

Thirty complaint surveys were sent out in quarter 4 to

patients/carers who made a complaint and had received as

response within this period. 6 responses have been received to

date.

4 (66%) were either satisfied or very satisfied with how their

complaint was handled. 1 did not provide a response and 1 was

very dissatisfied at the delay in receiving their response, although

they acknowledged being kept informed of the delay. Timeliness

of responses is being addressed with the Divisions.

26