Patient Satisfaction At The Muhimbili National Hospital In Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
Objectives: Patients are the primary beneficiaries of the services and care that hospitals provide. The Patient Satisfaction study examined the extent to which patients at the Muhimbili National Hospital (MNH) were satisfied with the services and care they received at MNH. This was part of a baselin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | East African journal of public health 2008-08, Vol.5 (2), p.67-73 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Objectives: Patients are the primary beneficiaries of the services
and care that hospitals provide. The Patient Satisfaction study
examined the extent to which patients at the Muhimbili National
Hospital (MNH) were satisfied with the services and care they received
at MNH. This was part of a baseline study that sought to determine the
level of performance of the hospital before massive restructuring,
reform, and renovations were undertaken. Methodology: Exit interviews
were the main research method used to determine patient satisfaction.
Patients were interviewed as they were leaving the OPD clinics,
laboratory, X-ray, pharmacy and inpatient wards. Results: The study
found that most patients were satisfied with the services and care they
received. This high level of satisfaction must be viewed within the
context of a hierarchical public health care delivery system, with MNH
at the apex. The services and care MNH provides can only be excellent
compared to that provided by lower level health facilities. Indeed,
patients covered by this study perceived the services provided by MNH
as superior, and this was reflected in the high level of satisfaction
they reported. Some patients expressed dissatisfaction with specific
aspects of the services that they received. They were particularly
dissatisfied with long waiting times before receiving services, the
high costs of treatment and investigations charged at MNH, poor levels
of hygiene in the wards, and negative attitudes of staff towards
patients. Conclusion: Although only a small proportion of patients
expressed dissatisfaction with these aspects of the services provided,
they are significant in that they constitute a call for action by the
MNH management to encourage the health personnel to embrace a new
staffpatient relationship ethos, in which the patient is a viewed as a
customer. |
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ISSN: | 0856-8960 0856-8960 |