Healthcare (Sep 2023)

What Do Students’ Questionnaire Responses Tell Us about Their Language around Person-Centred Care? An Exploratory Sentiment Analysis

  • Helen Wood,
  • Gabrielle Brand,
  • Rhonda Clifford,
  • Sinead Kado,
  • Kenneth Lee,
  • Liza Seubert

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11172458
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 17
p. 2458

Abstract

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There is a global movement for health and social care to be person-centred: supporting people’s active participation when making health decisions and considering their opinions, beliefs, and needs. The World Health Organization recommend the inclusion of person-centred care in health and social care provision. This research aimed to explore Australian health and social care profession students’ language around person-centred care. Final-year health and social care professions students, attending one of two Australian universities, participated in an online questionnaire. Responses were analysed and themed to an existing person-centred care framework, then a sentiment analysis was applied to each response. Of the responses collected from 90 students, 235 statements were linked to the four core values of the person-centred care framework: cultivating communication (44%); respectful and compassionate care (35%); engaging patients in managing their care (20%); and integration of care (<1%). Within these, 24 statements were positively aligned (10%); 100 statements were neutral (43%); and 111 statements contained negative sentiments (47%). Almost half of the responses were not aligned with the core values of person-centred care. This suggests that many of the final-year students are not yet conceptualizing care using a person-centred approach.

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