Study links NHS trust empathy scores to better patient and staff outcomes
A new study has found that NHS trusts in England with higher empathy scores tend to have better patient outcomes, improved staff wellbeing, and lower spending on agency staff and external consultants. The research, led by Prof Jeremy Howick at the University of Leicester, is the first to rate NHS trusts based on an empathy score derived from data on organisational culture, leadership behaviour, and practitioner empathy. The study found that even small increases in a trust’s empathy score were linked to a greater likelihood of receiving a “good” or “outstanding” rating from the Care Quality Commission for effectiveness and patient safety. Higher-scoring trusts also reported less staff burnout and absenteeism, and spent hundreds of thousands of pounds less on temporary staff. The research has been submitted to BMC Health Services Research but has not yet been peer reviewed, and the authors note the study cannot prove causation. The top-ranked trusts included Cumbria, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS foundation trust, Pennine Care NHS foundation trust, and Birmingham Women’s and Children’s NHS foundation trust.
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Sources: The Guardian
