Woods-Drew-Leydon2015

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Woods-Drew-Leydon2015
BibType ARTICLE
Key Woods-Drew-Leydon2015
Author(s) Catherine J. Woods, Paul Drew, Geraldine Marie Leydon
Title Closing calls to a cancer helpline: Expressions of caller satisfaction
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Helplines, Closings, Cancer
Publisher
Year 2015
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Journal Patient Education and Counseling
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Number
Pages
URL Link
DOI doi:10.1016/j.pec.2015.04.015
ISBN
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Institution
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Abstract

Objective This study provides an alternative approach to assessing caller satisfaction focussing on how callers express their appreciation of the service provided during the call, as the calls draw to a close.

Methods Conversation analysis is used to analyse 99 calls between callers and cancer specialist nurses on a leading cancer helpline in the UK.

Results Caller satisfaction is expressed through upgraded forms of the appreciations through which callers begin to close the call. Dissatisfaction is conveyed in what are by comparison with expressions of satisfaction, downgraded forms which acknowledge but do not fully or enthusiastically appreciate the information/advice given. With latter calls, nurses begin to ‘re-open’ aspects of information/advice giving, thereby leading to more protracted call closings.

Conclusion Endogenous indicators of caller satisfaction are displayed through callers’ upgraded appreciations in the closing moments of helpline calls. Difficulties in terminating calls (protracted by nurses re-opening information-giving etc.) arise when callers do not convey their satisfaction with the service provided.

Practice implications An understanding of endogenous indicators of satisfaction may benefit helpline organisations and further their understanding of effective call-handling, particularly through identifying the features common to those calls in which callers do not display their satisfaction with the call.

Notes

needs post-publication info