
@article{ref1,
title="A comparison of the quality of care in accident and emergency departments in England and the Netherlands as experienced by patients",
journal="Health expectations: an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy",
year="2014",
author="Bos, Nanne and Seccombe, Ian J. and Sturms, Leontien M. and Stellato, Rebecca and Schrijvers, Augustinus J. P. and van Stel, Henk F.",
volume="19",
number="3",
pages="773-784",
abstract="BACKGROUND: Measuring patients' experiences to determine health-care performance and quality of care from their perspective can provide valuable evidence for international improvements in the quality of care. We compare patients' experiences in Accident & Emergency departments (A&E) in England and the Netherlands and discuss the usefulness of this comparison. <br><br>METHODS: A cross-sectional survey was conducted among patients attending A&Es aged 18 years and older. In England, 134 A&Es were surveyed. In the Netherlands, nine hospitals participated in the study. Main outcome measures were patients' experiences represented by six domain scores aggregated on the country level or on the A&E level. <br><br>RESULTS: In England, 43 892 completed questionnaires were received (40%). In the Netherlands, 1865 completed questionnaires were received (42%). Three of six domain scores were significantly higher for patients in the Netherlands: 'waiting time' [mean scores of 73.8 (NL) versus 67.2 (ENG)], 'doctors and nurses' [mean scores of 85.7 (NL) versus 80.6 (ENG)] and 'your care and treatment' [mean scores of 82.6 (NL) and 80.2 (ENG)]. The variance among the English A&Es was large. The best and worst practices on five domains were English. <br><br>CONCLUSIONS: The mean quality of care in the A&E appeared to be better in the Netherlands on three domains, but the best practices were English A&Es. The within-country differences between A&Es were much larger than differences between countries. Healthcare performance in the A&E can be compared between countries by surveying patients' experiences, and there seems much to learn across A&Es both within and among countries.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1369-6513",
doi="10.1111/hex.12282",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hex.12282"
}