Development and pilot of a community low‐vision, service‐specific Patient‐Reported Experience Measure

Author:

Bartlett Rebecca1ORCID,Absalom Rachel1,Williams Owen2,Withers Kathleen3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Low Vision Service Wales Hywel Dda University Health Board Carmarthen UK

2. Wales Council of the Blind CF24 0BL Cardiff UK

3. Cedar Health Technology Research Centre Cardiff and Vale University Health Board Cardiff UK

Abstract

AbstractPurposePatient‐Reported Experience Measures (PREMs) act to identify the patient's objective experience while receiving care. PREM data can provide feedback to professionals on patients' personal experience of care processes, quality of care and insight into patient expectations. This can support service improvements and person‐centeredness of care. Despite this, PREMs are not currently routinely collected for any primary eye care services in Wales, inclusive of the National Low Vision Service Wales (LVSW). The primary aim of this project was to develop and pilot a community low‐vision, service‐specific, PREM (LVSWPREM).MethodsThe development of the LVSWPREMs was performed in partnership with LVSW service users. Fourteen people attended three successive, 1.5‐h online focus groups, and informed the development of a draft of LVSWPREMs inclusive of item generation and face validity. Following several rounds of iterative improvements based on the feedback gathered during the focus groups, LVSWPREM V4.0 was agreed upon and piloted for a period of 3 months within Hywel Dda University Health Board. Reliability of the final LVSWPREM V4.0 was assessed using Cronbach α.ResultsThe final LVSWPREMs consisted of two parts: (1) LVSW‐specific items and (2) a generic PREM tool approved by the Welsh Government for use across National Health Service Wales. Reliability analyses with item deletion were conducted for each construct separately using Cronbach α and were 0.94 and 0.63 for parts 1 and 2, respectively.ConclusionThe LVSWPREM is a validated, reliable tool, which can be used to provide information regarding patients' experience of accessing a community‐based, low‐vision service. Developed in partnership with people with vision impairment, it has the potential to be useful as a means of patient engagement and improvement in the delivery of high‐quality healthcare.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sensory Systems,Optometry,Ophthalmology

Reference33 articles.

1. Welsh Government.A healthier Wales: our plan for health and social care. Welsh Government;2018.

2. Welsh Government.Health and social care (quality and engagement) (Wales) bill. Welsh Government;2019.

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