Open Access
Patient’s Satisfaction and Barrier to Seek Services From the Nurses in a Tertiary Level Hospital
Author(s) -
Shurjomukhi Das,
i Bagchi
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
american journal of multidisciplinary research and innovation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2832-4854
pISSN - 2158-8155
DOI - 10.54536/ajmri.v1i1.140
Subject(s) - happiness , medicine , service quality , nursing , patient satisfaction , tertiary level , health care , quality (philosophy) , service (business) , customer satisfaction , tertiary care , medical emergency , family medicine , psychology , business , marketing , social psychology , philosophy , mathematics education , epistemology , economic growth , economics
This Quantitative study was conducted among the patients of BIRDEM, Dhaka. The study's goal was to determine user expectations, client satisfaction levels, and the quality of health care supplied in a tertiary level hospital in Bangladesh. A total of 100 respondents were chosen by systematic random sampling and interviewed. The study's findings suggest that client happiness is influenced by providers' behavior, particularly respect and politeness. A reduction in waiting time (on average to 30 min) was more important to clients than a prolongation of the quite short consultation time (on average 2 min, 22 sec), with 75% of clients being satisfied. patients spend 10 minutes or less than that for checkup. Delays in service may be acceptable due to the high volume of patients, existing facilities, and the large number of service providers. Overpopulation at the healthcare facility was named as the cause by 29.8% of respondents, while lack of trained manpower and doctors were named as the causes by 22.5 percent and 19.7 percent, respectively. Finally, the study suggests that boosting resources, as well as effective supervision and monitoring, could help enhance the hospital's service quality.