Assessing satisfaction with social care services among black and minority ethnic and white British carers of stroke survivors in England

Article


Greenwood, N., Holley, J., Ellmers, T., Bowling, A. and Cloud, G. 2015. Assessing satisfaction with social care services among black and minority ethnic and white British carers of stroke survivors in England. Health and Social Care in the Community. https://doi.org/10.1111/hsc.12298
TypeArticle
TitleAssessing satisfaction with social care services among black and minority ethnic and white British carers of stroke survivors in England
AuthorsGreenwood, N., Holley, J., Ellmers, T., Bowling, A. and Cloud, G.
Abstract

Overall satisfaction levels with social care are usually high but lower levels have been reported among black and minority ethnic (BME) service users in England. Reasons for this are poorly understood. This qualitative study therefore explored satisfaction with services among informal carer participants from five different ethnic groups. Fifty-seven carers (black Caribbean, black African, Asian Indian, Asian Pakistani and white British) were recruited from voluntary sector organisations and a local hospital in England, and took part in semi-structured interviews using cognitive interviewing and the critical incident technique. Interviews took place from summer 2013 to spring 2014. Thematic analysis of the interviews showed that participants often struggled to identify specific ‘incidents’, especially satisfactory ones. When describing satisfactory services, participants talked mostly about specific individuals and relationships. Unsatisfactory experiences centred on services overall. When rating services using cognitive interviewing, explicit comparisons with expectations or experiences with other services were common. Highest satisfaction ratings tended to be justified by positive personal characteristics among practitioners, trust and relationships. Lower level ratings were mostly explained by inconsistency in services, insufficient or poor care. Lowest level ratings were rare. Overall, few differences between ethnic groups were identified, although white British participants rated services higher overall giving more top ratings. White British participants also frequently took a more overall view of services, highlighting some concerns but still giving top ratings, while South Asian carers in particular focused on negative aspects of services. Together these methods provide insight into what participants mean by satisfactory and unsatisfactory services. Cognitive interviewing was more challenging for some BME participants, possibly a reflection of the meaningfulness of the concept of service satisfaction to them. Future research should include comparisons between BME and white participants’ understanding of the most positive parts of satisfaction scales and should focus on dissatisfied participants.

Keywordsblack and minority ethnic groups, carers, satisfaction, social care services
PublisherWileyBlackwell
JournalHealth and Social Care in the Community
ISSN1365-2524
Publication dates
Print26 Oct 2015
Publication process dates
Deposited22 Apr 2016
Accepted13 Sep 2015
Publisher's version
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Copyright Statement

© 2015 The Authors. Health and Social Care in the Community Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License,
which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and
no modifications or adaptations are made.

Additional information

Version of Record online: 26 OCT 2015

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1111/hsc.12298
LanguageEnglish
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