Evaluating staff satisfaction in the Patient Centered Medical Home pilot project in Singapore

  • Vrijhoef H
  • Grooten F
  • Koh T
  • et al.
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Abstract

Objective: The patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model of care may bring about higher job satisfaction among staff but may also lead to staff burnout. We report the baseline results of a staff satisfaction survey as we refine the processes in implementing the PCMH for the first time in Asia. Methodology: An abridged version of the Patient Aligned Care Team (PACT) Personnel Survey (30 items) was self-completed by staff of the Frontier Family Medicine Clinic in collaboration with National University Health System when it was newly opened in April 2013. Results: Among 19 respondents, majority were female (74%), aged 40-49 years (42%), of Chinese race (79%), were less than 6 months into their current job (63%), and had a clinical job (53%). Majority (55%) experienced stress occasionally with 16% experiencing at least some degree of burnout. Majority (53%) were somewhat satisfied and 16% were very satisfied with their job. Majority (68%) agreed that they were involved in developing plans for improving quality. Majority (89%) felt that they spent at least 50% of their time on work that matched their training well. Conclusions: The management needs to be aware that while staff felt involved in this new setup, the stress involved may have affected job satisfaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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APA

Vrijhoef, H., Grooten, F., Koh, T., Tai, E., & Wee, H. (2013). Evaluating staff satisfaction in the Patient Centered Medical Home pilot project in Singapore. International Journal of Integrated Care, 13(8). https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.1508

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