Heretical thought coing up here... but does feeding back
patient stories to Trusts and managers actually have any effect? The
belief that it does is obviously core to what Patient Opinion is about.
But what is the evidence for us being effective?And is there evidence
from other fields?
There are quite a lot of examples on Patient Opinion of Trusts making improvements or saying they are going to do things as a direct result of patient comments. And increasingly patients comment on whether this has happened or not.
So we know that in principle it can work. And there is a lot of
evidence from studies of innovation in the commercial sector that
customers are increasingly important as co-producers of new products
and of innovation - for example Eric Von Hippell's work at MIT that shows that customer suggestions were the source of 60% of all successful innovations in some fields.
But
- to keep asking the unthinkable- does the same really work in the NHS?
For all our success there are still hundreds of comments on Patient
Opinion that would make great learning tools for teams or that
are crying our for responses - that go unanswered.
Of course there are lots of reasons why this might be so:
1.
We're all - Patient Opinion, Trusts, PCTs, patient groups - at the
begining of this learning curve of understanding how best to use the
web to improve public services at scale.
2. The NHS has a
'process' culture. It always defaults to trying to change the
protocol, or the guideline, or the staff policy in the belief that then
reality on the ground will automatically change too. When this works
it's a very efficient way to generate change. But it often doesn't -
especially for 'relational' aspects of care (How did you feel? Were you
washed gently? Listened to? ) as opposed to the transactional (Was you
BP measured enough? Were you given advice to stop smoking? How long did
you wait?).
3. The feedback model presents the NHS with
thousands of tiny blemishes. The NHS knows that reaching for a protocol
won't work for these because each comment is about something much less
(affecting fewer people) and much more (the core experience of
being cared for) than the 'system' or the 'protocol' itself. So for
busy staff feedback systems like Patient Opinion or IWantGreatCare or
Your Thoughts on NHS Choices seem to be no more than a way of
letting a thousand sticking plasters bloom. And why would they want
that?
The answer to all this is a change in culture so that the
individual interaction and the relationships between people that
underpin all protocols and systems everywhere are seen as the core of
care not added extras. Feedback done right is about a thousand
opportunities to let staff creativity and vocation flourish, to help
them go home at the end of the day feeling that they have done a really
profesional job. Done wrong it is about a thousand opportunites to
ignore what patients are saying, or to beat up busy staff with yet more
innane targets such as how many times a day nurses smile. Or worse that
'caring' in the sense that seriously ill people need looking after,
suporting and lisetning to, becomes trivialised into the Have a Nice
Day approach of 'customer care'.
Slowly this is beginning to happen. But the task
for all feedback sites like us is to keep innovating and learning about
how to use the power of the web to change a thousand feedback
stories into better services in ways that scale and don't demand a new
project or programme or 15 meetings each and every time you want to get
something done.