2021
DOI: 10.1177/2374373521997742
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The Patient Experience of Inpatient Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Exploring Patient Perceptions, Communication, and Quality of Care at a University Teaching Hospital in the United Kingdom

Abstract: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has necessitated many rapid changes in the provision and delivery of health care in hospital. This study aimed to explore the patient experience of inpatient care during COVID-19 pandemic. An electronic questionnaire was designed and distributed to inpatients treated at a large University Health Board over a 6-week period. It focused on hospital inpatients’ experience of being cared for by health care professionals wearing personal protective equipment (PPE), ex… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(43 citation statements)
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References 12 publications
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“…Within our institution during the no-visitor period, treatment teams increasingly arranged patient-inclusive televideo family meetings, and visitor restrictions were incorporated into care coordination during multidisciplinary case management rounds and discharge planning. These measures were similar to what has been recommended in the literature and systematically reported by other institutions ( 5 , 8 , 14 ). Preliminary results of our findings were presented at a hospital Quality Improvement forum and shared with treatment teams.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
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“…Within our institution during the no-visitor period, treatment teams increasingly arranged patient-inclusive televideo family meetings, and visitor restrictions were incorporated into care coordination during multidisciplinary case management rounds and discharge planning. These measures were similar to what has been recommended in the literature and systematically reported by other institutions ( 5 , 8 , 14 ). Preliminary results of our findings were presented at a hospital Quality Improvement forum and shared with treatment teams.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…This project demonstrates that by certain measures, patient experience among those with cancer and non-COVID-19 diagnoses may not be adversely affected by no-visitor policies. These findings add to the mixed results reported on the subject ( 2 , 5 8 ), and we suspect that they are multifactorial. They corroborate evidence suggesting that patients may still rate their quality of care highly during visitor restrictions, notwithstanding their reported sense of loneliness ( 8 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 67%
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