A cross-market analysis of 343,764 patient survey invitations, 54,757 NPS responses, and 30,613 open-text comments — across fertility, dental, orthopaedic, diagnostic, paediatric, polyclinic, and aesthetic clinics.
Private healthcare clinics using structured patient feedback programmes achieve NPS scores 20–27 points above published industry averages — and exceed the "world-class" +70 threshold by nearly 10 points.
The 79.6 global NPS sits 21–27 points above Retently (+53) and CustomerGauge (+58), and exceeds "world-class" (+70) by nearly 10 points.
37.8% of patients scoring 7–8 leave negative or mixed open-text feedback — 5.6× the rate of promoters. They quietly churn.
Switching to the best-performing copy lifts response rates from 20.8% to 25.1% — and raises the scores patients give.
Accounts using survey reminders see response rates climb from 22.5% to 28.4% — a +5.9pp gain.
Clinics collecting more structured patient feedback also generate substantially more Google reviews — by a wide margin. Patient experience measurement is a reputation engine.
Every patient feedback programme is a funnel. Industry benchmarks place B2C response rates at 5–15% (CustomerGauge) and U.S. healthcare post-visit at 23%. InsiderCX clinics: 21.2% on delivered invitations.
Patients in higher-stakes care relationships respond more readily. Aesthetic medicine — elective care with less emotional urgency — translates into less engagement.
Built from 85.2% promoters, 9.3% passives, 5.6% detractors. For every patient who would not recommend, more than fifteen would.
+53 industry avg+70 world-class
Scores are tightly compressed across cohorts. Gen X edges ahead of the working-age group while Silent trails — Gen Alpha sits highest but on a small sample.
Passives are 5.6 times more likely than promoters to express active dissatisfaction in their written comments.
A mature feedback programme treats neutral comments as prompts for further inquiry — not data to be filed away. Mean sentiment score: +0.38 (on a -1 to +1 scale).
Prevalence of topics across all open-text feedback · topics scoring ≥ 2% shown
A single category — overall experience — accounts for nearly a quarter of all tagged feedback. After that, operational fundamentals dominate: staff, appointment timeliness, the doctor, and quality of care. Together these five topics account for more than half of everything patients wrote about. Pricing & billing surfaces in 3.5% — a reminder that cost stays in view even where patients have self-selected into a paid model.
Together, these four levers nearly double a programme's response volume. Ranked by measured impact.
Counting responses from both initial invite and reminder, the effective response rate rose to 28.4% — the largest effect of any lever measured.
Move from a fixed send time to an algorithmically optimised one — varying when each patient receives their survey based on their responsiveness window.
The "Future" variant — framing the survey around helping the clinic improve for future patients — outperformed every other tested variant.
The 13:00 slot leads at 24.6% — roughly the lunch break. Most other hours cluster between 18–20%.
Same audience, same channel, same send window — only the message framing changed.
13:00 wins. The lunch-break slot beats neighbouring hours by 4+ percentage points.
Clinics with >3,000 responses average more than 8× the Google reviews of clinics with <500. Patient experience measurement is a reputation engine.
37.8% of 7–8 scorers leave negative or mixed feedback. The Passive Risk Index gives clinics a way to monitor it.
Optimised send times lift response rates 14%. The right copy adds another 4+ percentage points.
+5.9 percentage points, from 22.5% to 28.4%. Nothing else comes close.
Clinics collecting more feedback accumulate more Google reviews — by a wide margin.
Methodology, niche-by-niche breakdowns, and the full appendix — including every chart in this summary plus three more on lifecycle stage, channel comparison, and quarter-on-quarter trend.