In todays patient-centered world, dental practices thrive when they truly listen to their patients. Feedback helps practices like McLevin Dental continuously improve services, enhance care, and ensure that everyoneregardless of ability, background, or comfort levelfeels valued and supported. However, gathering feedback isnt always as simple as handing out a generic form. To serve diverse communities, especially patients with disabilities or communication challenges, clinics must focus on designing inclusive surveys.
Inclusive surveys arent just good practicetheyre a key part of creating dental experiences that are welcoming, comfortable, and responsive to every patients needs.
Why Traditional Surveys Miss the Mark
Standard patient satisfaction surveys often assume that:
Everyone reads and processes information the same way
All patients are comfortable with written text
Feedback questions apply universally
This overlooks the needs of patients who may have:
Developmental disabilities
Sensory processing disorders
Communication challenges
Limited literacy or language barriers
Anxiety that impacts how they process questions
An inclusive approach to surveys ensures every voice is heardaccurately and respectfully.
The Benefits of Inclusive Surveys in Dentistry
1. Better Understanding of Patient Needs
Inclusive surveys capture the experiences of patients who might otherwise stay silent due to inaccessible feedback processes.
2. Improved Dental Experiences
By learning directly from diverse patient voices, dental clinics can make tangible improvementswhether its offering sensory-friendly options, adjusting appointment lengths, or improving communication styles.
3. Stronger Patient-Clinic Relationships
When patients see that their feedback leads to real change, they develop greater trust and loyalty to the clinic.
4. Compliance and Equity
Inclusive surveys align with accessibility standards and demonstrate a clinics commitment to health equity for all patients.
How to Design an Inclusive Dental Survey
Use Clear, Simple Language
Avoid jargon like prophylaxis or periodontal treatment.
Use straightforward questions like Was the dentist gentle? or Did you feel comfortable during your visit?
Offer Multiple Formats
Paper forms with large print
Digital surveys with screen reader compatibility
Visual surveys using pictures or emoji-style rating scales for non-verbal patients or young children
In-person interviews with a staff member for those who prefer speaking over writing
Keep It Short and Focused
Overly long surveys can be overwhelming. Focus on key areas:
Comfort during the visit
Communication with the dental team
Accessibility of the clinic (physical, sensory, or communication-wise)
Satisfaction with the quality of care
Use Visual Supports
For children, non-readers, or patients with developmental disabilities, visual supports make questions clearer. Examples include:
Smile faces for rating scales (happy, neutral, sad)
Pictures of dental tools or spaces to help pinpoint concerns
Offer Language and Communication Support
Translate surveys into multiple languages common in the community.
Provide plain-language versions.
Allow for voice-to-text responses for patients with motor or writing challenges.
Ensure Anonymity If Preferred
Patients may feel safer giving honest feedback if surveys are anonymous, especially when sharing sensitive concerns.
Ask Open-Ended and Guided Questions
Example guided questions include:
What made you feel most comfortable during your visit?
Was there anything that was difficult or uncomfortable for you?
Is there anything we can do to make your next visit better?
Involve Patients in Survey Design
The most effective surveys are co-created with input from patients themselves. Asking families of patients with disabilities, senior patients, or those with diverse backgrounds to review and help shape survey questions ensures relevance and clarity.
What Happens After the Survey?
An inclusive survey is only the first step. At McLevin Dental, we believe in a feedback-to-action model:
Reviewing survey responses regularly with the team
Identifying patterns in feedback (e.g., noise levels being too high for sensory-sensitive patients)
Implementing changes and notifying patients about improvements (You told us you needed so weve added )
Continuing the conversation with follow-up questions or community feedback meetings
Examples of Positive Change from Patient Feedback
At McLevin Dental, patient feedback has helped us:
Introduce sensory-friendly accommodations like dimmable lights and quiet waiting areas
Adjust appointment times for patients who need slower-paced visits
Offer communication boards for non-verbal patients or those with speech delays
Improve wheelchair accessibility in treatment rooms
Conclusion
Designing inclusive surveys isnt just about gathering feedbackits about building a practice that listens, adapts, and grows with its community. At McLevin Dental, we are committed to ensuring that every patientregardless of age, ability, or backgroundfeels heard, respected, and empowered in their dental care.
If you have suggestions for how we can improve, or if youre looking for a dental home that values your feedback and your comfort, reach out to McLevin Dental today. Your voice shapes the future of our careand your smile is our priority.