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Hospital uses focus group to drive changes to surgical procedures

12 December 2011 426 views One Comment

After finding success in using focus groups to evaluate advertising campaigns, Sheepherd Hospital has applied the consumer research tool to its surgical suite. In September, a focus group consisting of four community members, three former patients and a ventriloquist from a traveling circus provided feedback that led to significant changes in the hospital’s open-heart surgery program.

“We have had a long history of success using focus groups to improve our advertising,” said Sheepherd CEO Jerry Feeble. “They have consistently provided invaluable advice, like how our ads should include more doctors in them, or how the logo should be much, much bigger. One person said she liked seeing lots of different fonts in each ad, so now we try to use at least 12 fonts in every ad! As targets of our marketing, they obviously have tremendous marketing expertise. So we thought, as patients of our clinical care, they would have the same tremendous expertise on surgical procedures. QED.”

The heart surgery focus group started with a 20-minute presentation from a cardiovascular surgeon on how open-heart surgery worked. Feeble said that while the surgeon initially complained that he would never be able to explain such an extraordinarily complex procedure to average people, let alone in less than an hour, the participants seemed to get the idea fairly quickly.

“You could tell from the blank stares on their faces that they were in deep thought, their minds racing with how to improve on our approach,” said Feeble. “As soon as we started asking questions, they provided feedback, which proves they know what they’re talking about.”

Feeble said that a number of the ideas stemming from the focus group will become policy at Sheepherd, such as having surgeons on roller skates for a more “fun” hospital experience, and enabling patients to begin the anesthesia process at home so they can go directly from the car to the operating room.

“Look, these folks may not have any medical expertise, but they happen to live in our market, and they give opinions when asked” said Feeble. “That makes them experts in our book.”

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One Comment »

  • Lori Rice said:

    Great to hear the initiative to be thinking out-of-the box getting ideas to work in healthcare. I picked the double coupon in the poll, thinking that there are plenty of folks out there without reasonable deductables that put off the tests they need to prevent chronic disease conditions. Enabling the people who can to bring a friend who needs the procedure might be a good idea. Thanks Chris and team for helping us to think forward! Lori

    PS: Loved your book Chris – “Joe Public Doesn’t Care About Your Hospital” Time for us all to evolve our approach to healthcare delivery.

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