Volume 5, Issue 1 pp. 3-8

Public participation in the evaluation of health care

Ray Fitzpatrick PhD

Corresponding Author

Ray Fitzpatrick PhD

Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Oxford, UK and

Professor R. Fitzpatrick Nuffield College Oxford OX1 1NF United KingdomSearch for more papers by this author
Deena White PhD

Deena White PhD

Department of Sociology, University of Montreal, Quebec, Canada

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First published: 08 June 2007
Citations: 19

Abstract

Of the many concepts and issues that have dominated debates in western health care systems in the last 20 or so years few can have had as much currency as that of “patient satisfaction”. The word “patient” is loaded and often deliberately substituted so that reference is made to the satisfaction of the “user”, “consumer”, “community”, “public” or “lay person”. All versions draw attention to a universal concern that modern health care is inherently prone to failure to meet the wants, needs, demands and expectations of the recipients of health care. “Patient satisfaction” as a policy issue is invariably viewed as a problem in need of urgent solutions. For some analysts it is the most urgent of all problems for health care systems the primary purpose of which is to satisfy users and potential users of health care.

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