journal article Open Access Jul 13, 2022

Contextual factors influencing patients' experiences of acute deterioration and medical emergency team ( MET ) encounter: A grounded theory study

Journal of Advanced Nursing Vol. 78 No. 12 pp. 4062-4070 · Wiley
View at Publisher Save 10.1111/jan.15336
Abstract
Abstract

Aim
This paper explores the personal, social and structural factors that influence patients' experiences of acute deterioration and medical emergency team (MET) encounter.


Background
Patient experience is recognized as a means of assessing healthcare delivery with a positive experience being linked to high‐quality healthcare, improved patient safety and reduced length of stay. The experience of acute deterioration is unique, extensive and complex. However, little is known about this experience from the patient's perspective.


Design
Constructivist grounded theory, informed by Kathy Charmaz, was used to explore the personal, social and structural factors that influence patients' experiences of acute deterioration and MET encounter.


Methods
Using a semi‐structured interview guide, in‐depth individual interviews were conducted with 27 patients from three healthcare services in Victoria, Australia. Data were collected over a 12‐month period from 2018 to 2019. Interview data were analysed using grounded theory processes.


Findings
Contextual factors exert a powerful influence on patients' experiences of acute deterioration and MET encounter. The most significant factors identified include patients' expectations and illness perception, relationship with healthcare professionals during MET call and past experiences of acute illness. The expectations and perceptions patients had about their disease can condition their overall experience. Healthcare professional–patient interactions can significantly impact quality of care, patient experience and recovery. Patients' experiences of illness and healthcare can impact a person's future health‐seeking behaviour and health status.


Conclusion
Patients' actions and processes about their experiences of acute deterioration and MET encounter are the result of the complex interface of contextual factors.


Impact
The findings from this study have highlighted the need for revised protocols for screening and management of patients who experience acute deterioration.
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Metrics
6
Citations
41
References
Details
Published
Jul 13, 2022
Vol/Issue
78(12)
Pages
4062-4070
License
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Cite This Article
Catherine Chung, Lisa McKenna, Simon J. Cooper (2022). Contextual factors influencing patients' experiences of acute deterioration and medical emergency team ( MET ) encounter: A grounded theory study. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 78(12), 4062-4070. https://doi.org/10.1111/jan.15336
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