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Found 244 results
  1. Content Article
    This report by NHS Digital presents findings from the third in a series of follow up reports to the 2017 Mental Health of Children and Young People (MHCYP) survey, conducted in 2022. The sample includes 2,866 of the children and young people who took part in the MHCYP 2017 survey. It looks at the mental health of children and young people aged 7 to 24 years living in England in 2022, as well as examining their household circumstances, and their experiences of education, employment and services and of life in their families and communities.
  2. Content Article
    This survey from the Care Quality Commission (CQC) looks at the experiences of people receiving community mental health services. The 2020 community mental health survey received feedback from 17,601 people who received treatment for a mental health condition between 1 September 2019 and 30 November 2019. This report shows that people are consistently reporting poor experiences of NHS community mental health services, with few positive results. For example, poor experiences were reported for crisis care, accessing care, and involvement. It also found disparity in the experiences of different groups of people, especially among respondents with different diagnoses.
  3. Content Article
    Are you currently working on an inpatient mental health ward in the UK? NHS Oxford University Hospitals would like to learn about how you feel towards restrictive practices on mental health wards. Follow the link below to take part.
  4. Content Article
    This survey from Kopecky et al. assessed the in-hospital needs of patients diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). 
  5. Content Article
    Happier teams provide better care to patients. It is now accepted that good culture in the NHS is crucial to ensure that patients receive high quality care and better outcomes. As teams work to improve systems and processes, it is important that teams better understand their own culture to identify what works well and what can be improved. Each maternity and neonatal department in the collaborative is invited to undertake the SCORE survey locally. The survey is an internationally recognised way of measuring and understanding culture that exists within organisations and teams. It is an anonymous, online tool that teams can use to assess their culture. It provides an overview but also detail in specific focus areas such as communication and staff burn out. Once the survey has been completed, the results are provided to that team alone for them to use to start conversations internally about what and how they would like to improve culture. The results are not shared with anyone else and will never be used for bench marking or performance management. The patient safety collaborative also assists with the debriefing the results of the survey to staff.
  6. Content Article
    The South West Patient Safety Collaborative has introduced a validated assessment tool for safety culture in England, using a survey called SCORE (safety, communication, operational risk, resilience and reliability, and engagement). As part of the ‘Safer Culture, Better Care’ programme, this anonymous survey gives individuals and teams a fresh perspective on their current patient safety culture. Over 10,000 staff in 122 teams have taken part in the programme, leading to improved patient safety and new ways of working.
  7. Content Article
    This report is for everyone with an interest in our health care services, and who cares about the staff who form its bedrock: domestic staff, porters, administrators, doctors, nurses, midwives, health support workers, allied health professionals; managers, and all the other people who support them to deliver the best possible care for patients, their carers and families.
  8. Content Article
    The Patient Experience Library's patient surveys tracker offers one-click access to the key patient experience datasets for every Trust in England. 
  9. Content Article
    The National Centre for Social Research’s (NatCen’s) British Social Attitudes (BSA) survey has been conducted annually since 1983. Each year the survey asks people what it's like to live in Britain and what they think about how Britain is run, including measuring levels of public satisfaction with the health and care services.  The most recent survey was carried out between 7 September and 30 October 2022 and asked a nationally representative sample (across England, Scotland and Wales) of 3,362 people about their satisfaction with the National Health Service (NHS) and social care services overall, and 1,187 people about their satisfaction with specific NHS services, as well as their views on NHS funding.  This report highlights the key findings of the survey, which was jointly sponsored this year by The King's Fund and the Nuffield Trust.
  10. Content Article
    How does the public view the state of the health and care service? After political turmoil in Westminster, do people think the Government has the policies to set the NHS on the right course? With the health service under so much strain, do people remain committed to its founding principles? This long read by The Health Foundation presents its analysis of public perceptions research conducted with Ipsos that tracks the public’s views on health and social care in the UK every six months. The survey was conducted via Ipsos’ UK KnowledgePanel between 24 and 30 November 2022, with 2,063 people aged 16 and older across the UK.
  11. Content Article
    In this episode of the Ipsos Politics & Society Podcast, Kate Duxbury and Anna Quigley from Ipsos, Tim Gardner from The Health Foundation and Dan Wellings from The King’s Fund, discuss public perceptions towards the NHS and Social Care. They discuss: findings from the first results from the Health Foundation and Ipsos Policy Polling Programme. recent findings from the Expectations Tracker, including the public’s current and future expectations of the NHS and Social Care. upcoming findings from the King’s Fund British Social Attitudes survey.
  12. Content Article
    This analysis by the King's Fund looks at the latest British Social Attitudes (BSA) survey, which revealed that public satisfaction with the NHS fell by 17 percent between 2020 and 2021. It discusses the 'halo effect' that affected public attitudes to the NHS at the beginning of the pandemic, and why this has faded since 2021. The article highlights the importance of addressing workforce issues, but states that returning the NHS to an 'even keel' will take a long period of time. In the meantime, the Government should prioritise managing public expectations of the NHS. It also highlights that although the survey shows great dissatisfaction with the care currently provided, the public appears to have upheld its faith in the core principles of the NHS.
  13. Content Article
    This report by the Health Foundation examines shifts in public attitudes towards health, the NHS and social care caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. It highlights key findings from the first wave of the Health Foundation's new programme of polling research, delivered in partnership with Ipsos, that will track public views on health and social care every six months.
  14. Content Article
    Technology holds promise for the future of healthcare. It can prevent illness, enable early diagnosis, empower health management and support general wellbeing. But how might people use technology to have more control over their health and wellbeing? And do they want to? This report explores the role of technology in managing, improving and supporting health and wellbeing. The NHS Confederation, in partnership with Google Health, commissioned Ipsos to explore people’s behaviours, attitudes and beliefs about responsibility and control when it comes to their health, the role that health technologies play in this and their expectations about the future of healthcare. A survey of more than 1,000 adults in the UK – a third of whom live with one or more long-term conditions (LTCs) – and interviews with individuals with LTCs and who have frequent interaction with the health system, forms the centrepiece of this report.
  15. Content Article
    The Patient Experience Library aims to gather research and evidence about patient experience in one place, so that it can be accessed and used to improve patients' experiences of healthcare. In this annual report, The Patient Experience Library presents its top picks of evidence gathering about patient experience in England from the last twelve months. The research featured in the report includes studies by patient voice organisations, health charities, academic institutions and policy think tanks. The research takes variety of formats, from peer-reviewed formal research to less formal approaches built on community relationships, that lead to trusted dialogue and deep insight.
  16. Content Article
    Patient Experience in England rounds up twelve months of reporting, and summarises key findings. As well as a review of the national patient surveys, this thematic overview of recent research draws out cross-cutting learning on matters such as online engagement, patient safety and the evidence-practice gap in patient experience. "Listening to patients should not be seen as a chore, or a tick box" says Shaun Lintern in the foreword to this year's Patient Experience in England report.
  17. Content Article
    Last year, a report from the Health Foundation looked at quality measurement—including patient experience—across a range of healthcare services. It described a “measurement maze”, with multiple sources and numerous national bodies presiding over data collection. The potential usefulness of the data for trusts was “limited by the data being hard to locate online, with multiple spreadsheets to choose from and large Excel workbooks to download and navigate.” The Patient Experience Library wanted to find a solution to this, to find a way to organise all the data such that every Trust could get one-click access to everything it might need.. Miles Sibley, Director of the Patient Experience Library, explains what they did.
  18. Content Article
    The NHS Staff Survey is one of the largest workforce surveys in the world and has been conducted every year since 2003. It asks NHS staff in England about their experiences of working for their respective NHS organisations. The results of the latest NHS Staff Survey bear witness to the sustained pressure on the NHS over the last year. Undertaken during the second wave of the pandemic, the results point to improvements in areas including health and wellbeing. But it highlights that there remains some way to go to improve staff experience – particularly among ethnic minority staff – as the service recovers from the acute phase of the pandemic. In particular, it highlights the need for a renewed focus on equality and further progress on bullying, harassment and violence.  The full results of the 2020 NHS Staff Survey are published on the NHS Staff Survey website below along with briefings from the NHS Staff Survey centre on overall themes, benchmarking reports and five-yearly trends. You can also find a joint briefing with NHS Confederation on the Confed website.
  19. Content Article
    In this interview for Healthcare IT News, Lisa Hedges, associate principal analyst at Software Advice, discusses the findings of a survey of 1,000 patients on telemedicine usage after the worst of the pandemic. She also talks about the future of telemedicine. The survey found that: more than half of patients are concerned about the quality of care they're receiving through telemedicine. the majority of people prefer virtual appointments for common illnesses. 86% of patients rate their telemedicine experience as positive. 91% are more likely to choose a provider that offers telemedicine. 49% prefer telemedicine visits for mental health treatment, despite it being one of the more remote-ready specialties.
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