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Exploring the nonlinear impact of critical incidents on users’ satisfaction with healthcare services

Gerson Tontini (Department of Business Management, Universidade Regional de Blumenau – FURB, Blumenau, Brazil) (Universidade do Oeste de Santa Catarina – UNOESC, Chapecó, Brazil)
Elaine Vaz (Department of Business Management, Universidade Regional de Blumenau – FURB, Blumenau, Brazil)
Evelásio Vieira Neto (Department of Business Management, Universidade Regional de Blumenau – FURB, Blumenau, Brazil)
Julio Cesar Lopes de Souza (Department of Business Management, Universidade Regional de Blumenau – FURB, Blumenau, Brazil)
Leonardo Anésio da Silva (Department of Business Management, Universidade Regional de Blumenau – FURB, Blumenau, Brazil)
Mara Paz Maurício Nowazick (Department of Business Management, Universidade Regional de Blumenau – FURB, Blumenau, Brazil)

International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance

ISSN: 0952-6862

Article publication date: 15 April 2019

281

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the nonlinear impact of users’ memories on their general evaluation of outpatient healthcare services by the integration of two methodologies: critical incidents technique (CIT) and penalty-reward contrast analysis (PRCA).

Design/methodology/approach

The authors carried out a survey with 356 respondents, users of seven outpatient clinics located in the city of Blumenau/SC, Brazil, during 2016. The participants were asked about their perceptions of positive and negative aspects of the service; and, using CIT, the answers were categorized according to the following dimensions: empathy, communication, facilities, access, promptness, medicines availability, complementary services, safety/confidentiality and service performance. Then, the authors evaluated the nonlinear impact of critical incidents on users’ general evaluation of the service using the identified incidents as input variables in a PRCA.

Findings

The findings show that users of healthcare services tend to remember emotion and health aspects positively, while technical and formal aspects tend to be more negatively than positively remembered. On the other hand, PRCA identifies that incidents of three dimensions positively influence the overall perception of the service (empathy, complementary services and privacy) and five negatively (empathy, facilities, speed, drugs/pharmacy and health performance), explaining 26.3 percent of the variation in clients’ general satisfaction.

Originality/value

The present paper explores the integration of two methodologies, showing how we can use open listening to healthcare service users to identify the nonlinear impact of different incidents on their general evaluation of the service. The results show that what customers remember does not necessarily influence overall customer satisfaction. The present approach allows companies to improve the process of listening to customers. There are no other papers exploring this approach, particularly in relation to healthcare services.

Keywords

Citation

Tontini, G., Vaz, E., Neto, E.V., de Souza, J.C.L., da Silva, L.A. and Nowazick, M.P.M. (2019), "Exploring the nonlinear impact of critical incidents on users’ satisfaction with healthcare services", International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance, Vol. 32 No. 3, pp. 621-634. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJHCQA-04-2018-0089

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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