ASSESSMENT OF PATIENT SATISFACTION AT EMERGENCY SERVICES GIVEN AT ADDIS ABABA BURN, EMERGENCY AND TRAUMA CENTER
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND - Emergency departments overcrowding, long wait, and uncomfortable
waiting room conditions may lower perceived quality of the patient experience and satisfaction.
In the last decade, the increasing frequency of Emergency Department visits has coincided with
decreasing numbers of Emergency departments and inpatient beds. Thus, Emergency
departments nationwide are under growing pressure to provide care for more patients, resulting
in overcrowding, longer wait time, boarding of admitted patients, and ambulance diversion.
OBJECTIVE – The objective of the research is assessing patient satisfaction towards
emergency services given at Addis Ababa burn, emergency and trauma center in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia, 2009.
METHOD - A cross sectional prospective study design was conducted at AaBET from January
2017 to March 2017. The source population were all adults who came to AaBET for an
emergency care.
RESULTS – In this study a total number of three hundred and seventy-nine participants were
involved and among them, 223 (58.8%) of them who filled the questioners are patients and 156
(41.2%) of them are attendants. 72.4% of the participants were satisfied with the emergency
service given at AaBET. Regarding age of participants, those between 18 – 28 accounts for the
highest number of participants which is 44.3%. Of the eighty-nine participants who can’t speak
Amharic language, 85 of them had a language barrier. Length of stay prior to being seen by
physician, the minimum length of stay is one minute and the maximum length of stay is three
hundred minutes. Of the major aspects of emergency medical services given, the dissatisfaction
rate is higher in the aspects of cleanliness of the bathroom, toilet and EOPD, nurses’ explanation
well about the illness & length of stay before being seen. All the lines of dissatisfaction have to
be improved to give the best possible care for the patients.
CONCLUSION – The research shows that majority of the participants are satisfied with the
emergency services given at AaBET, but still evidence based interventions are needed on the line
of availability of prescribed drugs in the hospital, cleanliness of the EOPD, toilet and bathroom,
nurse’s explanation about their illness in a way the patients will understand, advices on danger
signs up on discharge, advices on major side effects of the drugs prescribed, good guides on
where to move in the hospital and on shortening waiting time.