Young Patient Survey
- Abstract
-
The Young Patient Survey, 2004 was designed to provide actionable feedback to each participating NHS trust on young patients' views (aged under 17) of the care they had received in Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) in England.
- Main Topics/Subject Category
- Hospital admissions (emergency and routine), waiting time, choice of admission date and whether cancelled, food, noise, cleanliness of ward, toilets and bathrooms, ward safety and security, toys, entertainment, play, educational, visitors facilities on ward, courtesy and helpfulness of doctors and nursing staff, information given to patient and relatives regarding treatment and drug prescriptions, parent/guardian participation in treatment and decision-making, pain, operations, pain control, reassurance given by staff, discharge from hospital, overall medical care received.
- Variables
- http://www.esds.ac.uk/findi[…]&class=0&from=sn#gs
- Keywords
- England, age, bathrooms, children, choice, cleaning, clinical tests and measurements, decision making, drug side-effects, educational background, educational provision, emergency and protective services, ethnic groups, families, food, gender, health, health advice, health consultations, health professionals, health services, hospital admissions, hospital discharges, hospital outpatient services, hospital visiting, hospitalization, hospitalized children, information, information needs, interpersonal trust, lavatories, medical care, medicinal drugs, noise, pollution, nurses, pain, parents, patients, performance, physicians, recreational facilities, surgery
- Identifier Variables
- PCT, HA
- Economic/Subject Categories
- Quality measure, Proxies
- Area of Health System
- Secondary care
- Data Available
- Risk behaviours
- Data collecting organization (s)
- Picker Institute Europe
- Data Type
- Survey (cross-sectional)
- National/Regional
- National
- Coverage (date of field work)
- 2004
- Unit of Analysis
- Individual
- Sample
-
62,277 children in England aged 0 to 17 years who had been treated as inpatients or day cases in any part of the trust including adult wards and were not maternity or psychiatry patients, surveyed in 2004
- Availability
- ESDS Access and Preservation, UK Data Archive
- Conditions of Access
- Free registration access
- Link
- http://www.esds.ac.uk/findi[…]mp;key=Young+Patient+Survey
- Contact
- caroline.powell@pickereurope.ac.uk
- Publications
- Viner RM. Do Adolescent Inpatient Wards Make a Difference? Findings From a National Young Patient Survey. Pediatrics 2007; 120(4):749