2022
DOI: 10.1111/hsc.13918
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What do Veterans with homeless experience want us to know that we are not asking? A qualitative content analysis of comments from a national survey of healthcare experience

Abstract: Surveys of people who experience homelessness can portray their life and healthcare experiences with a level of statistical precision; however, few have explored how the very same surveys can deliver qualitative insights as well. In responding to surveys, people experiencing homelessness can use the margins to highlight health and social concerns that investigators failed to anticipate that standard question batteries miss. This study describes the unprompted comments of a large national survey of Veterans wit… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Patient experience is complex and multifaceted, and positive measurements in one domain or value may not always translate to quality in other domains or values. Surveys that ask only binary or close-ended responses may fail to capture key patient perspectives and contextual information that is important to PEH [85].…”
Section: Future Directions and Implications For Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patient experience is complex and multifaceted, and positive measurements in one domain or value may not always translate to quality in other domains or values. Surveys that ask only binary or close-ended responses may fail to capture key patient perspectives and contextual information that is important to PEH [85].…”
Section: Future Directions and Implications For Practicementioning
confidence: 99%