It Is Time to Take Complaints Seriously? An Exploratory Analysis of Communications Sent by Users to a Public Healthcare Agency before, during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- September 2019 to February 2020 (pre-pandemic period).
- March 2020 to August 2020 (pandemic period).
- September 2022 to February 2023 (post-pandemic period).
3. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. The Main Semantic Cores
- Cluster 1:
- The right to be cared for and respected
- “They don’t know where to go and they don’t know how long they have to wait to check the course of their disease. Therefore, the TDM (patients’ court) understands the difficulty of patients, respecting the right to access: every individual has the right to access health services that his or her state of health requires.”
- “Other waiting patients complained about being greeted with profanity in the background when ringing the doorbell of the ward. I assure you that while it can be irritating for the staff to receive patients, it is certainly not a walk in the park for the patients to come to the hospital in this situation.”
- “When I went to the ward, I found the patient with the following conditions: open windows with the power going right on the patient; sun beating down on the medications and on the patient; foot bent to the bedside certainly for hours with severe injuries to the foot with related bleeding and sores.”
- “Every sick person has the right to quality continuity of care, both in and out of the hospital; the right to be welcomed into services by qualified staff who are willing to listen and fully trained as well as the right to have their specificity arising from age and health conditions recognized.”
- “Do patients remain patients from ward to ward? What happened to the right of a wife, a mother, a child to see a suffering relative in need of 10 min of affection? Does the Covid precaution start from the relatives of patients or from the staff serving in the wards, given the absence of the planned protective device?”
- Cluster 2:
- Barriers to access to care
- “Premise: I had been trying to get a visit through CUP (unique reservation centre) for a long time, but since everything was blocked, I decided to find a visit even for a fee. All the facilities contacted told me that the visit was 80 € + 50 for the ultrasound examination. So, all facilities, including xxx, told us that the full visit was 132 €.”
- “I took my disabled mother-in-law for a visit for ALPI activities with doctor xxx, paid the €82 co-pay regularly and waited in vain in the clinics. After some time, I noticed that no one was there to do the examination, I went to the ward to ask for an explanation and the medical staff told me that the doctor was not at work.”
- “The prescription for the examination to be done before the visit, I made it back in April as indicated in the attachment, but to date it has not been possible to have the reservation due to the known delays. I have been suggested to have the examination in other hospitals, but I do not have the possibility to go outside xxx.”
- “I went to the health directorate to complain and after contacting the on-call doctor of xxx ward he/she refused to do the exam stating that ALPI was working in charge of another doctor. I made myself available to regularize the ticket in his name but in vain. After several hours of waiting, I returned at 6 p.m. without performing any examination”.
- “So, after several checks, a nurse took my prescription and went to the CUP where he was printed the receipt of my reservation, only then I was informed that the doctor’s visit was at another facility. Once I got my car, I went to xxx hospital where I waited for the doctor to call me to make the visit.”
- Cluster 3:
- The impossibility of contact
- “I have called many times, and it is always busy, or rings and they don’t answer. The answering machine picks up, tells me the operator is busy and to call from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and two days a week in the afternoon; but I call but will I ever be lucky to get the line, what should I do?”
- “A week ago, I had called the ASL in xxx, since they were not answering I called the one in xxx, I had talked to an operator and asked if the ASL in xxx should make a reservation to do withdrawals, they answered and told me that I could go without a reservation. Today, however, when I showed up at the ASL of xxx I was told that I had to make a reservation.”
- “I confirm that no one answers and having contacted the xxx switchboard to get more information; the receptionist confirmed that complaints are widespread and daily because the service staff does not answer the numbers given, despite the fact that it is a paid service.”
- “I would like to report that the reservation centre is not answering the phone. After two days of continuous phone calls in the afternoon, no one answered. I had to go directly, in a pregnant state, to the counter located on the ground floor of xxx hospital to find out, cell phone in hand, that the phone at the booking point did not make a sound.”
- “Good morning, I’m txt, I’ve been trying to book the various exams for prevention for days, but at the numbers they gave me and found on the Puglia Salute website no one answers. Can you tell me how we can make reservations? There is a lot of talk about prevention, but it is impossible to make an appointment over the phone”
- Cluster 4:
- The value of the doctor–patient relationship
- “Good morning, I am the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. xxx who came to you on the day for a xxx in the emergency room of the xxx presidio. The emergency room promptly assisted dad and mom, thanks also to you. I would like to take this opportunity to thank and express our gratitude for how the team at xxx hospital extended care for my dad. A heartfelt thank you to the head doctor Dr. xxx.”
- “This is meant to be a praise to Dr. xxx, not to mention the invaluable intervention of the team that performed the operation. All of us, relatives and friends of the patient, wish to express our deep and sincere thanks to the said Doctor, as a doctor with professionalism and great humanity.”
- “At a sad and desperate time in our lives, I met exceptional people. People who work hard in your hospital and whom you can be proud of. I wanted you to share my thoughts for the doctor who, with great professionalism, contributes prestige. I have sent you an attached letter. I hope it may be appreciated.”
- “On behalf of myself and my entire family, I want to extend a simple thank you for the dedication and determination shown by all the teams, but in particular an endless thank you to the doctors of the xxx department. I ask that all departments in the hospital be as efficient as xxx’s department is, thank you.”
- “I wanted you to share my thoughts for the doctor who, with great professionalism, gave his life. I have sent you a letter attached. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Letter: To the doctor with infinite gratitude. sometimes it is difficult to express in words what is in one’s heart.”
4.2. The Latent Dimensions of Meaning
4.2.1. First Dimension: Kind of Demand Addressed to the Health System
4.2.2. Second Dimension: Focus of Discourse
4.3. Relationships between Dimensions of Meaning and Texts’ Characteristics
5. Discussion
5.1. Practical Implications
5.2. Limitations and Future Research Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Illustrative Variable | Modality | Percentage Value |
---|---|---|
Period | Pre-pandemic | 19.2% |
Pandemic | 38.7% | |
Post-pandemic | 42.1% | |
Typology | Complaints | 73.4% |
Appreciations | 16% | |
Requests for information | 10.6% |
N | |
---|---|
Texts in the corpus | 501 |
Elementary contexts (EC) | 1787 |
Types | 9411 |
Lemma | 4779 |
Occurrences (Tokens) | 78.511 |
Threshold of lemma selection | 15 |
Lemmas in analysis | 478 |
(−) Demand for Relationship | (+) Demand for Access to Care | ||
---|---|---|---|
Lemmas | Test Value | Lemmas | Test Value |
Professionality | −11.9054 | To answer | 9.8461 |
Thank you | −11.0784 | Booking | 9.6795 |
To thank | −10.7237 | To book | 9.436 |
Person | −9.0203 | Visit | 9.0178 |
Thanksgiving | −8.4761 | To make | 8.0087 |
Ward | −8.3159 | Request | 7.833 |
Doctor | −8.2677 | CUP | 7.5992 |
Patient | −8.1822 | Call | 7.4565 |
Care | −7.9482 | Examination | 7.21 |
Humanity | −7.7828 | Answer | 6.9294 |
Staff | −7.6903 | Number | 6.3859 |
Competence | −7.038 | Ask | 6.1528 |
Work | −7.0374 | To go | 6.1185 |
Violation | −7.0241 | Office | 6.0547 |
Word | −6.7799 | Prescription | 5.8849 |
Life | −6.6419 | 5.8515 | |
Professional | −6.6229 | To contact | 5.8034 |
Demonstrate | −6.4319 | To result | 5.3581 |
Particular | −6.2429 | Appointment | 5.323 |
Hospital | −6.2197 | Communicate | 5.1468 |
Human | −6.2044 | Check-up | 4.9324 |
Express | −6.1271 | Payment | 4.5119 |
Gratitude | −6.0287 | Telephone | 4.4783 |
Illness | −5.9415 | To attach | 4.2715 |
Mom | −5.8973 | Information | 4.2401 |
(−) Competence Required of the Healthcare Provider | (+) Needs and Rights of the service user | ||
---|---|---|---|
Lemmas | Test Value | Lemmas | Test Value |
Doctor | −7.0624 | Patient | 12.3807 |
Professionalism | −7.0382 | Right | 11.2772 |
Thank you | −6.6927 | Surgery | 8.661 |
Answer | −6.46 | Hospitalized | 8.4639 |
Big | −4.893 | To access | 8.3802 |
Thanksgiving | −4.7954 | Pathology | 7.2226 |
To feel | −4.7358 | Sanitary | 6.8835 |
Humanity | −4.5016 | To recover | 6.2835 |
Call | −4.1497 | Behaviour | 6.2189 |
Mom | −4.1363 | Health | 5.6436 |
Professional | −4.0924 | Citizen | 5.6425 |
Answer | −3.9777 | System | 5.5788 |
Violation | −3.9166 | Drug | 5.4057 |
Particular | −3.8359 | Therapeutic | 5.1719 |
Word | −3.7611 | To intervene | 5.062 |
Person | −3.7391 | Health Service | 4.9925 |
Number | −3.7365 | First-aid | 4.9666 |
Dad | −3.5983 | Affection | 4.7452 |
To result | −3.4951 | Ambulance | 4.6434 |
To demonstrate | −3.3877 | To submit | 4.4277 |
Office | −3.3528 | Serious | 4.3524 |
Son | −3.2091 | To die | 4.2613 |
To contact | −3.2023 | Assistance | 4.2423 |
Competence | −3-1427 | Quality | 4.212 |
Suffering | −3.0039 | To suffer | 4.2101 |
Factorial Dimension 1: Demand for Relationship (−) vs. Demand for Access to Care (+) | Factorial Dimension 2: Competence Required of the Healthcare Provider vs. Needs and Rights of the Service User | |
---|---|---|
Temporal Periods | Test Value * | Test Value * |
Pre-pandemic | −5.68 | −4.32 |
Pandemic | −12.53 | - |
Post-pandemic | 12.93 | 6.44 |
Typology | ||
Complaints | 14.41 | 5.82 |
Appreciations | −90.8 | −24.65 |
Requests for information | 22.67 | 4.83 |
Factorial Dimension 1: Demand for Relationship (−) vs. Demand for Access to Care (+) | Factorial Dimension 2: Competence Required of the Healthcare Provider vs. Needs and Rights of the Service User | |
---|---|---|
Clusters | Test Value * | Test Value * |
Cluster 1—The right to be cared for and respected | −21.85 | 48.50 |
Cluster 2—Barriers to access to care | 34.02 | 3.11 |
Cluster 3—The impossibility of contact | 38.93 | −18.82 |
Cluster 4—The value of the doctor–patient relationship | −60.86 | −27.65 |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Venuleo, C.; Marinaci, T.; Cucugliato, C.; Giausa, S. It Is Time to Take Complaints Seriously? An Exploratory Analysis of Communications Sent by Users to a Public Healthcare Agency before, during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024, 21, 1299. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21101299
Venuleo C, Marinaci T, Cucugliato C, Giausa S. It Is Time to Take Complaints Seriously? An Exploratory Analysis of Communications Sent by Users to a Public Healthcare Agency before, during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2024; 21(10):1299. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21101299
Chicago/Turabian StyleVenuleo, Claudia, Tiziana Marinaci, Camilla Cucugliato, and Sonia Giausa. 2024. "It Is Time to Take Complaints Seriously? An Exploratory Analysis of Communications Sent by Users to a Public Healthcare Agency before, during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 21, no. 10: 1299. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21101299
APA StyleVenuleo, C., Marinaci, T., Cucugliato, C., & Giausa, S. (2024). It Is Time to Take Complaints Seriously? An Exploratory Analysis of Communications Sent by Users to a Public Healthcare Agency before, during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 21(10), 1299. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21101299