Report to: Public Board of Directors Agenda item: 9 Date of Meeting: 28 June 2017

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Report to: Public Board of Directors Agenda item: 9 Date of Meeting: 28 June 2017 Title of Report: National Inpatient Survey Results 2016 Status: For information Board Sponsor: Helen Blanchard, Director of Nursing and Midwifery Author: Sharon Manhi, Lead for Patient and Carer Experience Appendices Appendix A: Care Quality Commission Survey results 2016 Appendix B: Care Quality Commission benchmarked results 1. Executive Summary of the Report This report provides a summary of the results of the Care Quality Commission (CQC) National Inpatient Survey 2016. The detail from the CQC survey results is attached at Appendix A. This includes a comparison of the scores for 2015 and 2016; whether the Trust has improved on each question or deteriorated and how the Trust compares for each question against all 149 other Trusts. Appendix B shows how the Trust benchmarks against other hospitals for 76 questions. There were 4 additional questions in 2016 where there is no comparable data. his The inpatient survey is part of the National NHS Patient Survey Programme and designed by the Picker Institute for the CQC. 83 Trusts were contracted by Picker to carry out the survey. However, the results published by the CQC reflect the Trust s performance compared to the scores for all Trusts. The questionnaire covers all aspects of the patient journey from admission to discharge. The report identifies areas where the Trust scored better than average together with areas where the Trust needs to improve. 2. Recommendations (Note, Approve, Discuss) The Board of Directors is requested to note the improvements identified in the report and approve the key areas of focus for 2017/18. 3. Legal / Regulatory Implications The Trust is legally required to meet the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. The Trust is currently registered with the CQC with no conditions applied. Care Quality Commission (CQC) Registration 2014/15 NHLSA Standard 2: Learning from Experience 4. Risk (Threats or opportunities, link to a risk on the Risk Register, Board Assurance Framework etc) A failure to demonstrate systematic quality improvement in the delivery of patient care could risk the Trust s registration with the CQC. Author: Sharon Manhi, Lead for Patient and Carer Experience Document Approved by: Helen Blanchard, Director of Nursing and Midwifery Date: 9 June 2017 Version: 1 Agenda Item: 9 Page 1 of 4

5. Resources Implications (Financial / staffing) A failure to comply with the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014 and the Care Quality Commission (Registration) Regulations 2009 could result in financial penalties. 6. Equality and Diversity Ensures compliance with the Equality Delivery System (EDS). 7. References to previous reports National Inpatient Survey results 2015 report to the Board of Directors June 2016 8. Freedom of Information This report is not exempt from publication. Author: Sharon Manhi, Lead for Patient and Carer Experience Date: 16 June 2017 Document Approved by: Helen Blanchard, Director of Nursing and Midwifery Version: 2 Agenda Item: 9 Page 2 of 4

Care Quality Commission (CQC) Inpatient Survey 2016 1. Background 1.1. The CQC inpatient survey 2016 results are based on the responses of 577 inpatients at the Trust in July 2016. The Trust s response rate was 48% compared to the national average of 44% (1,250 surveys were sent out). The survey was sent to patients aged 16 years and over and relates to planned and unplanned care. 1.2. The results allow us to identify where we performed 'better', 'worse' or 'about the same' compared with most other Trusts. The CQC will use the results from this survey in their regulation, monitoring and inspection of acute Trusts. The results also form a key source of evidence to support the judgments and ratings they publish for acute trusts. The Trust s report was published on the CQC website on 31 st May 2017. 2. The CQC report attached at Appendix A shows how the Trust scored for each question in the survey, compared with the results from all other trusts and whether we are performing about the same, better or worse than in 2015. The arrows indicate whether the score for this year has improved, stayed the same or deteriorated from the score in 2015 and by how much. However, no changes have been identified as statistically significant. 2.1. The Trust scored better than the national average on one question. If you brought your own medication with you to hospital, were you able to take it when you needed to? (Trust score 8.2/10) This is a new question and therefore there is no comparative data from last year. 2.2 In 2015, the Trust scored better on one question were you ever bothered by noise at night from hospital staff? In 2016, there were no questions where the Trust was in the worst performing category and this was the same in 2015. For the remaining questions, the Trust performed about the same as other Trusts. 3. The CQC benchmark report attached at Appendix B also shows the Trust scores for each question and the range of scores for all Trusts. The score for the RUH is shown as a black diamond on the red (worst performing); amber (about the same) and green (best performing) banding for the eleven section scores and for the 76 questions. 3.1 The areas for improvement have been identified where the Trust score is nearer the red banding, namely: Did you ever use the same bathroom or shower area as patients of the opposite sex? (Q14) Were you ever bothered by noise at night from other patients? (Q15) In your opinion, how clean was the hospital room or ward that you were in? (Q17) Author: Sharon Manhi, Lead for Patient and Carer Experience Date: 16 June 2017 Document Approved by: Helen Blanchard, Director of Nursing and Midwifery Version: 2 Agenda Item: 9 Page 3 of 4

How clean were the toilets and bathrooms that you used in hospital? (Q18) Were you told how you could expect to feel after you had the operation or procedure? (Q49) In addition aligning improvements to work already underway around discharge from hospital will support ongoing improvements to the section leaving hospital specifically: Before you left hospital, were you given any written or printed information about what you should or should not do after leaving hospital? (Q61) Did a member of staff explain the purpose of the medicines you were to take at home in a way you could understand? (Q62) Did hospital staff tell you who to contact if you were worried about your condition or treatment after you left hospital? (Q69) Did hospital staff discuss with you whether you would need any additional equipment in your home, or any adaptations made to your home, after leaving hospital? (Q70) 4. The responsibility for action to improve these areas/questions has been assigned to the appropriate leads and committees. The Patient and Carer Experience Group will monitor the plan on a quarterly basis. The assessments undertaken by the ward accreditation programme will use a number of questions that form part of the national survey. Bespoke surveys have also been developed for use by the Matrons using the Trust s e-quest system. The quarterly surveys will focus on the areas identified in the inpatient survey. Results from these surveys will be included in the quarterly Patient Experience report to the Board. 5. Recommendations The Board of Directors is asked to note the areas of good practice highlighted in the report and approve the above areas for improvement. Author: Sharon Manhi, Lead for Patient and Carer Experience Date: 16 June 2017 Document Approved by: Helen Blanchard, Director of Nursing and Midwifery Version: 2 Agenda Item: 9 Page 4 of 4

2016 Adult Inpatient Survey The survey information for your trust is provided below, to assist you in preparing for the publication of the 2016 Adult Inpatient Survey on 31 May 2017. On publication of the survey, the benchmark report for your trust will be available on the Patient Survey Co-ordination Centre s website and under the organisation search tool on the CQC website. Please note: the 2015 scores for your trust may differ slightly from those in the 2015 benchmark reports, published in June 2015. The Adult Inpatient survey data was revised in February 2016, due to historical sampling errors discovered during the 2016 sampling checking. Information on how to interpret this information is at the end of this document, similar to that provided within the published benchmark reports. If you need any assistance or have any queries please contact the CQC Survey s Team at: patient.survey@cqc.org.uk Survey of adults inpatients 2016 To improve the quality of services that the NHS delivers, it is important to understand what people think about their care and treatment. One way of doing this is by asking people who have recently used health services to tell us about their experiences. The fourteenth survey of adult inpatients involved 149 acute and specialist NHS trusts. Responses were received from 77,850 people, a response rate of 44%. Patients were eligible for the survey if they were aged 16 years or older, had spent at least one night in hospital and were not admitted to maternity or psychiatric units. Trusts sampled patients discharged during July 2016. Trusts counted back from the last day of July 2016, including every consecutive discharge, until they had selected 1250 patients (or, for a small number of specialist trusts who could not reach the required sample size, until they had reached 1st January 2016). Fieldwork took place between September 2016 and January 2017. Similar surveys of adult inpatients were also carried out in 2002 and annually from 2004 to 2015. They are part of a wider programme of NHS patient surveys, which cover a range of topics including A&E services, children's inpatient and day-case services, maternity services and community mental health services. To find out more about our programme and for the results from previous surveys, please see the links contained in the further information section. The Care Quality Commission will use the results from this survey in our regulation, monitoring and inspection of NHS acute trusts in England. We will use data from the survey in our system of CQC Insight, which provides inspectors with an assessment of risk in areas of care within an NHS trust that need to be followed up. The survey data will also be included in the data packs that we produce for inspections. NHS England will use the results to check progress and improvement against the objectives set out in the NHS mandate, and the Department of Health will hold them to account for the outcomes they achieve. The NHS Trust Development Authority will use the results to inform quality and governance activities as part of their Oversight Model for NHS Trusts. Trusts have differing profiles of people who use their services. For example, one trust may have a higher proportion of male service users than another trust. This can potentially affect the results because people tend to answer questions in different ways, depending on certain characteristics. For example, older respondents tend to report more positive experiences than younger respondents, and women tend to report less positive experiences than men. This could potentially lead to a trust s results appearing better or worse than if they had a slightly different profile of people. To account for this, we standardise the data. Results have been standardised by the age and gender of respondents to ensure that no trust will appear better or worse than another because of its respondent profile. This helps to ensure that each trust s age-gender profile reflects the national age-gender distribution (based on all of the respondents to the survey). It therefore enables a more accurate comparison of results from trusts with different population profiles. In most cases this standardisation will not have a large impact on trust results; it does, however, make comparisons between trusts as fair as possible. Scoring For each question in the survey, the individual (standardised) responses are converted into scores on a scale from 0 to 10. A score of 10 represents the best possible response and a score of zero the worst. The higher the score for each question, the better the trust is performing. It is not appropriate to score all questions in the questionnaire as not all of the questions assess the trusts in any way, for example, they may be may be routing questions designed to filter out respondents to whom the following questions do not apply. For full details of the scoring please see the technical document (provided to trust survey leads alongside the trust benchmark report). Methodology The about the same, better and worse categories are based on a statistic called the 'expected range which determines the range within which the trust s score could fall without differing significantly from the average, taking into account the number of respondents for each trust and the scores for all other trusts. If the trust s performance is outside of this range, it means that it performs significantly above or below what would be expected. If it is within this range, we say that its performance is about the same. This means that where a trust is performing better or worse than the majority of other trusts, it is very unlikely to have occurred by chance. Banding: If a trust is performing 'beter' than the majority of other trusts, Better will appear in the 2016 banding column. If a trust is performing 'worse' than the majority of other trusts, Worse will appear in the 2016 banding column. If a trust is performing 'about the same' no score will be displayed in the 2016 banding column. Please note: if fewer than 30 respondents have answered a question, no score will be displayed for this question (or the corresponding section). This is because the uncertainty around the result is too great. A technical document providing more detail about the methodology and the scoring applied to each question is available on the CQC website and was provided to trust survey leads alongside this document. Scores from last year's survey are also displayed where available. The column called 'change from 2015' uses arrows to indicate whether the score for this year shows a statistically significant increase (up arrow), a statistically significant decrease (down arrow) or has shown no statistically significant change (no arrow) compared with 2015. A statistically significant difference means that the change in the result is very unlikely to have occurred by chance. Significance is tested using a two-sample t-test. Please note: comparative data is not shown for sections as the questions contained in each section can change year on year. Where a result for 2015 is not shown, this is because the question was either new this year, or the question wording and/or the response categories have been changed. It is therefore not possible to compare the results as we do not know if any change is caused by alterations to the survey instrument, or variation in a trust's performance. For information on question changes in the 2016 questionnaire, please see the next section ( notes on specific questions ). Comparisons are also not able to be shown if a trust has merged with other trusts since the 2015 survey, or if a trust committed a sampling error in 2015. Notes on specific questions Please note that a variety of acute trusts take part in this survey and not all questions are applicable to every trust. The section below details modifications to certain questions, in some cases this will apply to all trusts, in other cases only to some trusts.

All trusts Q11 and Q13: The information collected by Q11 "When you were first admitted to a bed on a ward, did you share a sleeping area, for example a room or bay, with patients of the opposite sex?" and Q13 "After you moved to another ward (or wards), did you ever share a sleeping area, for example a room or bay, with patients of the opposite sex?" are presented together to show whether the patient has ever shared a sleeping area with patients of the opposite sex. The combined question is numbered in this report as Q11 and has been reworded as "Did you ever share a sleeping area with patients of the opposite sex?" Please note that the information based on Q11 cannot be compared to similar information collected from surveys prior to 2006. This is due to a change in the question's wording and because the results for 2006 onwards have excluded patients who have stayed in a critical care area, which almost always accommodates patients of both sexes. Q20: This question (Q20 in 2015 inpatient questionnaire), Were hand-wash gels available for patients and visitors to use? was removed from the 2016 survey because it was found there were very little differentiation between trusts, as well as the fact that there had been little movement over time. Q20, Q21 and Q32: Did you get enough help from staff to wash or keep yourself clean?, If you brought your own medication with you to hospital, were you able to take it when you needed to? and Did you know which nurse was in charge of looking after you? (this would have been a different person after each shift change) are new questions in 2016 and it is therefore not possible to compare with 2015. Q55 and Q56: The information collected by Q55 "On the day you left hospital, was your discharge delayed for any reason?" and Q56 "What was the main reason for the delay?" are presented together to show whether a patient's discharge was delayed by reasons attributable to the hospital. The combined question in this report is labelled as Q56 and is worded as: "Discharge delayed due to wait for medicines/to see doctor/for ambulance." Q57: Information from Q55 and Q56 has been used to score Q57 "How long was the delay?" This assesses the length of a delay to discharge for reasons attributable to the hospital. Q60: Q60 When you left hospital, did you know what would happen next with your care? was part of the 2015 survey and was redeveloped for 2016 (Q58 in the 2015 inpatient questionnaire) and it is therefore not possible to compare with 2015. Trusts with female patients only Q11, Q13 and Q14: If your trust offers services to women only, a trust score for Q11 "When you were first admitted to a bed on a ward, did you share a sleeping area, for example a room or bay, with patients of the opposite sex?, Q13 After you moved to another ward (or wards), did you ever share a sleeping area, for example a room or bay, with patients of the opposite sex? and Q14 "While staying in hospital, did you ever use the same bathroom or shower area as patients of the opposite sex?" is not shown. Trusts with no A&E Department Q3 and Q4: The results to these questions are not shown for trusts that do not have an A&E department. Further information The full national results are on the CQC website, together with an A to Z list to view the results for each trust (alongside the technical document outlining the methodology and the scoring applied to each question): www.cqc.org.uk/inpatientsurvey

Appendix A: CQC Inpatient Survey Results Question Survey question Ranking (compared to other trusts) 2015 score 2016 score Section 1 The Emergency/A&E Department 8.8 3 While you were in the A&E Department, how much information about your condition or treatment was given to you? Change from 2015 to 2016 Trend 10 of 136 8.3 8.7 0.4 4 Were you given enough privacy when being examined or treated in the A&E Department? 66 of 136 8.6 8.8 0.2 Section 2 Waiting List or Planned Admission 8.7 6 How do you feel about the length of time you were on the waiting list before your admission to 108 of 149 7.9 7.9 0.0 hospital? 7 Was your admission date changed by the hospital? 78 of 149 9.0 9.2 0.2 8 In your opinion, had the specialist you saw in hospital been given all of the necessary information about your condition or illness from 59 of 149 9.0 9.1 0.1 the person who referred you? Section 3 All Types of Admission 7.5 9 From the time you arrived at the hospital, did you feel that you had to wait a long time to get to a 61 of 149 7.6 7.5 0.1 bed on a ward? Section 4 The Hospital & Ward 8.1 11 When you were first admitted to a bed on a ward, did you share a sleeping area, for example a room or bay, with patients of the opposite sex? 1 100 of 147 8.8 9.1 0.3 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Did you ever use the same bathroom or shower area as patients of the opposite sex? Were you ever bothered by noise at night from other patients? Were you ever bothered by noise at night from hospital staff? In your opinion, how clean was the hospital room or ward that you were in? How clean were the toilets and bathrooms that you used in hospital? Did you feel threatened during your stay in hospital by other patients or visitors? Did you get enough help from staff to wash or keep yourself clean? If you brought your own medication with you to hospital, were you able to take it when you needed to? 127 of 147 7.9 8.1 0.2 128 of 149 5.7 5.6 0.1 34 of 149 8.4 8.2 0.2 130 of 149 8.6 8.7 0.1 126 of 149 8.4 8.3 0.1 24 of 149 9.7 9.8 0.1 34 of 149 8.5 8 of 149 8.2 Better 22 How would you rate the hospital food? 64 of 149 6.1 5.8 0.3 23 Were you offered a choice of food? 72 of 149 8.7 8.8 0.1

Appendix A: CQC Inpatient Survey Results Question Survey question Ranking (compared to other trusts) 2015 score 2016 score Change from 2015 to 2016 Trend 24 Did you get enough help from staff to eat your meals? 25 of 149 7.6 8.0 0.4 Section 5 Doctors 8.8 25 When you had important questions to ask a doctor, did you get answers that you could 30 of 149 8.5 8.5 0.0 understand? 26 Did you have confidence and trust in the doctors 36 of 149 9.1 9.1 0.0 treating you? 27 Did doctors talk in front of you as if you weren t there? 71 of 149 8.6 8.7 0.1 Section 6 Nurses 8.2 28 When you had important questions to ask a nurse, did you get answers that you could 32 of 149 8.7 8.6 0.1 understand? 29 Did you have confidence and trust in the nurses treating you? 19 of 149 9.0 9.1 0.1 30 Did nurses talk in front of you as if you weren t there? 69 of 149 9.0 9.0 0.0 31 In your opinion, were there enough nurses on duty to care for you in hospital? 86 of 149 7.4 7.4 0.0 32 Did you know which nurse was in charge of looking after you? (this would have been a 39 of 149 6.9 different person after each shift change) Section 7 Your Care & Treatment 8.0 33 In your opinion, did the members of staff caring for you work well together? 49 of 149 9.0 8.8 0.2 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 Sometimes in a hospital, a member of staff will say one thing and another will say something quite different. Did this happen to you? Were you involved as much as you wanted to be in decisions about your care and treatment? Did you have confidence in the decisions made about your condition or treatment? How much information about your condition or treatment was given to you? Did you find someone on the hospital staff to talk to about your worries and fears? Do you feel you got enough emotional support from hospital staff during your stay? Were you given enough privacy when discussing your condition or treatment? Were you given enough privacy when being examined or treated? 29 of 149 8.3 8.4 0.1 44 of 149 7.6 7.5 0.1 33 of 149 8.3 8.6 0.3 44 of 149 8.3 8.2 0.1 21 of 149 5.8 6.2 0.4 52 of 149 7.6 7.3 0.3 77 of 149 8.4 8.5 0.1 70 of 149 9.3 9.5 0.4

Appendix A: CQC Inpatient Survey Results Question Survey question Ranking (compared to other trusts) 2015 score 2016 score Change from 2015 to 2016 Trend 43 Do you think the hospital staff did everything they could to help control your pain? 26 of 149 8.5 8.6 0.1 44 After you used the call button, how long did it usually take before 62 of 149 6.4 6.2 0.2 you got help? Section 8 Operations & Procedures 8.6 46 Beforehand, did a member of staff explain the risks and benefits of the operation or procedure in a way you could understand? 15 of 149 9.1 9.3 0.2 47 48 49 51 Beforehand, did a member of staff explain what would be done during the operation or procedure? Beforehand, did a member of staff answer your questions about the operation or procedure in a way you could understand? Beforehand, were you told how you could expect to feel after you had the operation or procedure? Before the operation or procedure, did the anaesthetist or another member of staff explain how he or she would put you to sleep or control your pain in a way you could understand? 42 of 149 8.8 8.8 0.0 21 of 149 8.8 9.1 0.3 107 of 149 7.4 7.1 0.3 12 of 149 9.3 9.4 0.1 52 After the operation or procedure, did a member of staff explain how the operation or procedure had gone in a way you could understand? 84 of 149 7.9 8.0 0.1 Section 9 Leaving Hospital 7.1 53 Did you feel you were involved in decisions about your discharge from hospital? 35 of 149 7.3 7.3 0.0 54 Were you given enough notice about when you were going to be discharged? 24 of 149 7.2 7.5 0.3 56 Discharge delayed due to wait for medicines/to see doctor/for 21 of 149 6.4 6.9 0.5 ambulance. 57 How long was the delay? 20 of 149 7.7 8.1 0.4 59 60 61 After leaving hospital, did you get enough support from health or social care professionals to help you recover and manage your condition? When you left hospital, did you know what would happen next with your care? Before you left hospital, were you given any written or printed information about what you should or should not do after leaving hospital? 74 of 149 7.0 6.7 0.3 61 of 149 6.9 121 of 149 6.2 6.0 0.2

Appendix A: CQC Inpatient Survey Results Question 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 Survey question Did a member of staff explain the purpose of the medicines you were to take at home in a way you could understand? Did a member of staff tell you about medication side effects to watch for when you went home? Were you told how to take your medication in a way you could understand? Were you given clear written or printed information about your medicines? Did a member of staff tell you about any danger signals you should watch for after you went home? Did hospital staff take your family or home situation into account when planning your discharge? Did the doctors or nurses give your family or someone close to you all the information they needed to help care for you? Did hospital staff tell you who to contact if you were worried about your condition or treatment after you left hospital? Did hospital staff discuss with you whether you would need any additional equipment in your home, or any adaptations made to your home, after leaving hospital? Did hospital staff discuss with you whether you may need any further health or social care services after leaving hospital? (e.g. services from a GP, physiotherapist or community nurse, or assistance from social services or the voluntary sector) Ranking (compared to other trusts) 2015 score 2016 score Change from 2015 to 2016 Trend 99 of 149 8.4 8.1 0.3 45 of 149 4.8 4.9 0.1 78 of 149 8.5 8.2 0.3 100 of 149 7.8 7.7 0.1 44 of 149 5.3 5.6 0.3 42 of 149 7.6 7.4 0.2 32 of 149 6.4 6.4 0.0 109 of 149 7.6 7.4 0.2 93 of 149 8.7 8.0 0.7 69 of 149 8.6 8.2 0.4 Section 10 Overall view of care and services 5.6 72 Overall, did you feel you were treated with respect and dignity while you were in the hospital? 30 of 149 9.3 9.3 0.0 73 During your time in hospital did you feel well looked after by hospital staff? 33 of 149 9.1 9.1 0.0 74 Overall 56 of 149 8.0 8.2 0.2 75 76 During your hospital stay, were you ever asked to give your views on the quality of your care? Did you see, or were you given, any information explaining how to complain to the hospital about the care you received? 63 of 149 1.5 1.9 0.4 113 of 149 2.0 2.1 0.1

Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust Your sample Your trust Number of respondents 577 Response rate (%) 48.48739496 Demographic characteristics (%) Gender Male 42.2 Religion Female 57.8 No religion 18.1 Buddhist 0.4 Age Group Christian 77.6 Aged 16-35 3.8 Hindu 0.0 Aged 36-50 10.1 Jewish 0.2 Aged 51-65 18.1 Muslim 0.2 Aged 66 and older 67.9 Sikh 0.0 Other religion 1.3 Ethnic group Prefer not to say 2.3 White 93.9 Multiple ethnic group 0.2 Sexual orientation Asian or Asian British 0.2 Heterosexual/straight 94.4 Black or Black British 1.0 Gay/lesbian 0.6 Arab or other ethnic group 0.0 Bisexual 0.4 Not known 4.7 Other 0.9 Prefer not to say 3.7

Appendix B Survey of adult inpatients 2016 Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust Section scores S1. The Emergency/A&E Department(answered by emergency patients only) S2. Waiting list and planned admissions (answered by those referred to hospital) S3.Waitingtogettoabedonaward S4. The hospital and ward S5. Doctors S6. Nurses S7. Care and treatment S8. Operations and procedures(answered by patients who had an operation or procedure) S9. Leaving hospital S10. Overall views of care and services S11. Overall experience Best performing trusts About the same Worst performing trusts 'Better/Worse' Only displayed when this trust is better/worse than most other trusts This trust's score(nb: Not shown where there are fewer than 30 respondents) 5

Survey of adult inpatients 2016 Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust The Emergency/A&E Department(answered by emergency patients only) Q3.WhileyouwereintheA&EDepartment,how much information about your condition or treatment was given to you? Q4. Were you given enough privacy when being examined or treated in the A&E Department? Waiting list and planned admissions(answered by those referred to hospital) Q6.Howdoyoufeelaboutthelengthoftime youwereonthewaitinglist? Q7.Wasyouradmissiondatechangedbythe hospital? Q8. Had the hospital specialist been given all necessary information about your condition/illness from the person who referred you? Waitingtogettoabedonaward Q9.Fromthetimeyouarrivedatthehospital,did youfeelthatyouhadtowaitalongtimetogettoa bedonaward? Best performing trusts About the same Worst performing trusts 'Better/Worse' Only displayed when this trust is better/worse than most other trusts This trust's score(nb: Not shown where there are fewer than 30 respondents) 6

Survey of adult inpatients 2016 Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust The hospital and ward Q11.Didyouevershareasleepingareawith patients of the opposite sex? Q14.Didyoueverusethesamebathroomor shower area as patients of the opposite sex? Q15.Wereyoueverbotheredbynoiseatnight from other patients? Q16.Wereyoueverbotheredbynoiseatnight from hospital staff? Q17.Inyouropinion,howcleanwasthe hospitalroomorwardthatyouwerein? Q18. How clean were the toilets and bathrooms that you used in hospital? Q19.Didyoufeelthreatenedduringyourstayin hospital by other patients or visitors? Q20.Didyougetenoughhelpfromstafftowash or keep yourself clean? Q21.Ifyoubroughtyourownmedicationwithyou tohospital,wereyouabletotakeitwhenyou needed to? Better Q22.Howwouldyouratethehospitalfood? Q23.Wereyouofferedachoiceoffood? Q24.Didyougetenoughhelpfromstafftoeat your meals? Doctors Q25.Whenyouhadimportantquestionstoaska doctor,didyougetanswersthatyoucould understand? Q26.Didyouhaveconfidenceandtrustinthe doctors treating you? Q27.Diddoctorstalkinfrontofyouasifyou weren't there? Best performing trusts About the same Worst performing trusts 'Better/Worse' Only displayed when this trust is better/worse than most other trusts This trust's score(nb: Not shown where there are fewer than 30 respondents) 7

Survey of adult inpatients 2016 Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust Nurses Q28.Whenyouhadimportantquestionstoaska nurse,didyougetanswersthatyoucould understand? Q29.Didyouhaveconfidenceandtrustinthe nurses treating you? Q30.Didnursestalkinfrontofyouasifyou weren't there? Q31. In your opinion, were there enough nurses ondutytocareforyouinhospital? Q32.Didyouknowwhichnursewasinchargeof looking after you?(this would have been a different person after each shift change) Best performing trusts About the same Worst performing trusts 'Better/Worse' Only displayed when this trust is better/worse than most other trusts This trust's score(nb: Not shown where there are fewer than 30 respondents) 8

Survey of adult inpatients 2016 Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust Care and treatment Q33.Inyouropinion,didthemembersofstaff caring for you work well together? Q34.Didamemberofstaffsayonethingand another say something different? Q35.Wereyouinvolvedasmuchasyouwanted tobeindecisionsaboutyourcareand treatment? Q36. Did you have confidence in the decisions made about your condition or treatment? Q37. How much information about your condition or treatment was given to you? Q38.Didyoufindsomeoneonthehospitalstaff totalktoaboutyourworriesandfears? Q39.Doyoufeelyougotenoughemotional support from hospital staff during your stay? Q40. Were you given enough privacy when discussing your condition or treatment? Q41. Were you given enough privacy when being examined or treated? Q43.Doyouthinkthehospitalstaffdid everything they could to help control your pain? Q44.Afteryouusedthecallbutton,howlong diditusuallytakebeforeyougothelp? Best performing trusts About the same Worst performing trusts 'Better/Worse' Only displayed when this trust is better/worse than most other trusts This trust's score(nb: Not shown where there are fewer than 30 respondents) 9

Survey of adult inpatients 2016 Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust Operations and procedures(answered by patients who had an operation or procedure) Q46.Didamemberofstaffexplaintherisksand benefitsoftheoperationorprocedureinawayyou could understand? Q47.Didamemberofstaffexplainwhatwould be done during the operation or procedure? Q48.Didamemberofstaffansweryour questions about the operation or procedure? Q49.Wereyoutoldhowyoucouldexpectto feel after you had the operation or procedure? Q51. Did the anaesthetist or another member of staffexplainhowheorshewouldputyoutosleep or control your pain? Q52. Afterwards, did a member of staff explain how the operation or procedure had gone? Best performing trusts About the same Worst performing trusts 'Better/Worse' Only displayed when this trust is better/worse than most other trusts This trust's score(nb: Not shown where there are fewer than 30 respondents) 10

Survey of adult inpatients 2016 Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust Leaving hospital Q53.Didyoufeelyouwereinvolvedin decisions about your discharge from hospital? Q54. Were you given enough notice about when you were going to be discharged? Q56. Discharge delayed due to wait for medicines/to see doctor/for ambulance. Q57.Howlongwasthedelay? Q59.Didyougetenoughsupportfromhealthor social care professionals to help you recover and manage your condition? Q60.Whenyoulefthospital,didyouknowwhat would happen next with your care? Q61.Wereyougivenanywrittenorprinted information about what you should or should not do after leaving hospital? Q62.Didamemberofstaffexplainthepurposeof themedicinesyouweretotakeathomeinaway you could understand? Q63.Didamemberofstafftellyouabout medication side effects to watch for when you went home? Q64.Wereyoutoldhowtotakeyourmedication inawayyoucouldunderstand? Q65. Were you given clear written or printed information about your medicines? Q66.Didamemberofstafftellyouaboutany danger signals you should watch for after you went home? Q67.Didhospitalstafftakeyourfamilyorhome situation into account when planning your discharge? Q68.Didthedoctorsornursesgiveyourfamilyor someone close to you all the information they neededtocareforyou? Q69.Didhospitalstafftellyouwhotocontactifyou were worried about your condition or treatment after you left hospital? Best performing trusts About the same Worst performing trusts 'Better/Worse' Only displayed when this trust is better/worse than most other trusts This trust's score(nb: Not shown where there are fewer than 30 respondents) 11

Survey of adult inpatients 2016 Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust Q70. Did hospital staff discuss with you whether additional equipment or adaptations were needed in your home? Q71. Did hospital staff discuss with you whether youmayneedanyfurtherhealthorsocialcare services after leaving hospital? Overall views of care and services Q72.Overall,didyoufeelyouweretreatedwith respect and dignity while you were in the hospital? Q73.Duringyourtimeinhospitaldidyoufeel well looked after by hospital staff? Q75. During your hospital stay, were you ever askedtogiveyourviewsonthequalityofyour care? Q76.Didyousee,orwereyougiven,any information explaining how to complain to the hospital about the care you received? Overall experience Q74.Overall... Ihadaverypoor experience Ihadaverygood experience Best performing trusts About the same Worst performing trusts 'Better/Worse' Only displayed when this trust is better/worse than most other trusts This trust's score(nb: Not shown where there are fewer than 30 respondents) 12