ABSTRACT

The Language of Patient Feedback provides a unique insight into a diverse range of issues related to healthcare. Through the comprehensive and detailed interrogation of 29 million words of online patient feedback on the NHS in England, as well as 11 million words of responses to the feedback from NHS providers, this book:

  • Uses a combination of computer-assisted and human analysis (Corpus-Assisted Discourse Analysis) to examine the extent to which characteristics like age and gender result in different types of evaluation.
  • Investigates why nurses, doctors, dentists and receptionists are associated with very distinct types of feedback.
  • Demonstrates the ways that NHS staff respond to comments and what this reveals about underlying institutional ideologies and practices.
  • Concludes with suggestions for key recommendations that the NHS could act upon to improve the overall level of care it provides, as well as reflecting on what patient evaluation can actually tell us.

The Language of Patient Feedback is key reading for anyone undertaking research within corpus linguistics, discourse analysis and health communication.

chapter Chapter 1|39 pages

Introduction

The NHS, patient feedback and corpus linguistics

chapter Chapter 2|33 pages

What seems to be the trouble?

Identifying key areas of patient concern

chapter Chapter 3|25 pages

On a scale of one to five …

Comparing the rating scale with written feedback

chapter Chapter 4|35 pages

Rude receptionists, dismissive doctors and lovely nurses

Comparing NHS providers and staff

chapter Chapter 5|32 pages

I have been a patient with this surgery all my life

Age and evaluation

chapter Chapter 6|24 pages

Real men don’t feel pain

Language and gendered expectations

chapter Chapter 7|25 pages

Your feedback is important to us

Staff replies to patient feedback

chapter Chapter 8|14 pages

Conclusion

The health of the NHS