2014
DOI: 10.1111/adj.12200
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The Dental Practice Questionnaire: a patient feedback tool for improving the quality of dental practices

Abstract: Background:The recently introduced Practice Accreditation Scheme as part of the Australian National Safety and Quality Health Service (NSQHS) standards raises the question of how dental practices can implement valid and reliable patient experience feedback mechanisms for performance evaluation and enhancement. This article describes the development and use of a dental patient questionnaire (DPQ) that can be used for this purpose. Methods: DPQ was piloted on 58 voluntary dental practices across Australia and re… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 22 publications
(29 reference statements)
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“…A 2019 systematic review of PREMs (Bull et al, 2019) reported four articles from the Australian context including the practice accreditation and improvement survey (Greco et al, 2001). This survey and the dentistry equivalent (Narayanan & Greco, 2014) included items such as respect, warmth, ability to really listen and consideration of personal situation. An additional questionnaire by Oades et al (2010) included items exploring stigma, power and powerless, relationship with community and family and staff, information and education and holistic care.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A 2019 systematic review of PREMs (Bull et al, 2019) reported four articles from the Australian context including the practice accreditation and improvement survey (Greco et al, 2001). This survey and the dentistry equivalent (Narayanan & Greco, 2014) included items such as respect, warmth, ability to really listen and consideration of personal situation. An additional questionnaire by Oades et al (2010) included items exploring stigma, power and powerless, relationship with community and family and staff, information and education and holistic care.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whilst such questionnaires demonstrate validity, structural integrity and reliability, no attempt has been made to evaluate the value or effectiveness of the instrument in informing professional development. 9 Patients may not always be best placed to comment on the quality of care provided by a doctor, dentist or student as they may not be reliable assessors of a practitioners clinical skills, moreover they may use this opportunity to comment on peripheral events beyond the control of the practitioner, such as waiting time, and, their opinion may be influenced by external factors such as cultural differences between the practitioner and the patient. 10 Feedback should perhaps therefore focus more on interpersonal skills, how the patient felt about their experience and the information they were provided with.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study was carried out using the survey method based on a questionnaire. In the study, we used the DPQ (Dental Practice Questionnaire) [ 17 ]. The DPQ is a self-assessed questionnaire designed based on three dimensions: 7 performance evaluation questions are about access to the practice—‘dental practice’ performative items (Q1–Q7), while one question is about overall satisfaction with this visit to the dentist (Q8—‘summative’ patient satisfaction), 11 performance evaluation questions are about interpersonal and communication skills of the dentist—dentist ‘performative’ items (Q8–Q19), while one question is regarding dentist recommendations given by patients (Q20), and 3 questions are about the service provided at the practice (Q21–Q23).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The DPQ is a self-assessed questionnaire designed based on three dimensions: 7 performance evaluation questions are about access to the practice—‘dental practice’ performative items (Q1–Q7), while one question is about overall satisfaction with this visit to the dentist (Q8—‘summative’ patient satisfaction), 11 performance evaluation questions are about interpersonal and communication skills of the dentist—dentist ‘performative’ items (Q8–Q19), while one question is regarding dentist recommendations given by patients (Q20), and 3 questions are about the service provided at the practice (Q21–Q23). Items from the satisfaction scale (first 20 items) were measured on a Likert scale from 1 to 5 (1—low; 2—moderate; 3—good; 4—very good; 5—excellent), while items for questions about the service provided at the practice were binary (yes/no) [ 17 ].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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