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ED Services: The Impact of Caring Behaviors on Patient Loyalty

Sandra S. Liu, PhD, David Franz, MHA, FACHECorresponding Author Informationemail address, Monette Allen, RN, MSN, En-Chung Chang, PhD Candidate, Dana Janowiak, MSHA, Patricia Mayne, RN, BSN, MHA, CEN, Ruth White, RN, BSN

published online 24 February 2010.
Corrected Proof

Introduction

This article describes an observational study of caring behaviors in the emergency departments of 4 Ascension Health hospitals and the impact of these behaviors on patient loyalty to the associated hospital. These hospitals were diverse in size and geography, representing 3 large urban community hospitals in metropolitan areas and 1 in a midsized city.

Methods

Research assistants from Purdue University (West Lafayette, IN) conducted observations at the first study site and validated survey instruments. The Purdue research assistants trained contracted observers at the subsequent study sites. The research assistants conducted observational studies of caregivers in the emergency departments at 4 study sites using convenience sampling of patients. Caring behaviors were rated from 0 (did not occur) to 5 (high intensity). The observation included additional information, for example, caregiver roles, timing, and type of visit. Observed and unobserved patients completed exit surveys that recorded patient responses to the likelihood-to-recommend (loyalty) questions, patient perceptions of care, and demographic information.

Results

Common themes across all study sites emerged, including (1) the area that patients considered most important to an ED experience (prompt attention to their needs upon arrival to the emergency department); (2) the area that patients rated as least positive in their actual ED experience (prompt attention to their needs upon arrival to the emergency department); (3) caring behaviors that significantly affected patient loyalty (eg, making sure that the patient is aware of care-related details, working with a caring touch, and making the treatment procedure clearly understood by the patient); and (4) the impact of wait time to see a caregiver on patient loyalty. A number of correlations between caring behaviors and patient loyalty were statistically significant (P < .05) at all sites.

Discussion

The study results raised considerations for ED caregivers, particularly with regard to those caring behaviors that are most closely linked to patient loyalty but that occurred least frequently. The study showed through factor analysis that some caring behaviors tended to occur together, suggesting an underlying, unifying dimension to that factor.

Lafayette, IN, St Louis, MO, Kokomo, IN, Birmingham, AL, and Detroit, MI

Corresponding Author InformationFor correspondence, write: David Franz, MHA, FACHE, 4600 Edmundson Rd, St. Louis, MO 63134

PII: S0099-1767(09)00219-0

doi:10.1016/j.jen.2009.05.001