Global scoping review of key domains of patient-reported experience of care measures across life stages and healthcare technical areas
Helen H Habib, Connie Zhang, Kathleen Hill, Lara M E Vaz, Barbara Rawlins, Özge Tunçalp, Moise Muzigaba, Ian Brownwood, Patience A Afulani

TL;DR
This study maps patient-reported experience measures in healthcare across different life stages and technical areas, highlighting common themes and gaps in quality of care measurement.
Contribution
The study provides a global overview of PREMs domains across healthcare areas and life stages, identifying disparities and opportunities for improvement.
Findings
Most studies focus on communication, respect, and dignity in patient care experiences.
High-income countries dominate PREMs research despite increasing interest in low- and middle-income countries.
Patient proxy measures are commonly used for younger and older populations.
Abstract
Patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) are measures of patients’ perceptions of care they receive. PREMs are critical in developing and evaluating programmes that aim to improve patient healthcare experiences and quality of care (QoC) according to patient-defined needs. This review aims to map key domains of PREMs across distinct healthcare technical areas and life stages from globally available literature. A scoping review adapting Arksey and O’Malley’s framework and Joanna Briggs Institute’s guidelines for the conduct of scoping reviews. Google Scholar, PubMed, WHO, US Academy of Medicine and USAID Momentum. PREMs literature from electronic repositories of grey and peer-reviewed publications, published in English historically up to September 2023. Two lead reviewers with support from the technical working group co-created a review framework of healthcare technical areas,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPatient Satisfaction in Healthcare · Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare · Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life
