RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 From the closest observers of patient care: a thematic analysis of online narrative reviews of hospitals JF BMJ Quality & Safety JO BMJ Qual Saf FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP 889 OP 897 DO 10.1136/bmjqs-2015-004515 VO 25 IS 11 A1 Bardach, Naomi S A1 Lyndon, Audrey A1 Asteria-Peñaloza, Renée A1 Goldman, L Elizabeth A1 Lin, Grace A A1 Dudley, R Adams YR 2016 UL http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/25/11/889.abstract AB Objective Patient-centred care has become a priority in many countries. It is unknown whether current tools capture aspects of care patients and their surrogates consider important. We investigated whether online narrative reviews from patients and surrogates reflect domains in the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) and we described additional potential domains.Design We used thematic analysis to assess online narrative reviews for reference to HCAHPS domains and salient non-HCAHPS domains and compared results by reviewer type (patient vs surrogate).Setting We identified hospitals for review from the American Hospital Association database using a stratified random sampling approach. This approach ensured inclusion of reviews of a diverse set of hospitals. We searched online in February 2013 for narrative reviews from any source for each hospital.Participants We included up to two narrative reviews for each hospital. Exclusions: Outpatient or emergency department reviews, reviews from self-identified hospital employees, or reviews of <10 words.Results 50.0% (n=122) of reviews (N=244) were from patients and 38.1% (n=93) from friends or family members. Only 57.0% (n=139) of reviews mentioned any HCAHPS domain. Additional salient domains were: Financing, including unexpected out-of-pocket costs and difficult interactions with billing departments; system-centred care; and perceptions of safety. These domains were mentioned in 51.2% (n=125) of reviews. Friends and family members commented on perceptions of safety more frequently than patients.Conclusions A substantial proportion of consumer reviews do not mention HCAHPS domains. Surrogates appear to observe care differently than patients, particularly around safety.