Patients' Preferences for Technical versus Interpersonal Quality When Selecting a Primary Care Physician
- 24 March 2005
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Health Services Research
- Vol. 40 (4), 957-977
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2005.00395.x
Abstract
Objective. To assess patients' use of and preferences for information about technical and interpersonal quality when using simulated, computerized health care report cards to select a primary care provider (PCP). Data Sources/Study Setting. Primary data collected from 304 adult consumers living in Los Angeles County in January and February 2003. Study Design/Data Collection. We constructed computerized report cards for seven pairs of hypothetical individual PCPs (two internal validity check pairs included). Participants selected the physician that they preferred. A questionnaire collected demographic information and assessed participant attitudes towards different sources of report card information. The relationship between patient characteristics and number of times the participant selected the physician who excelled in technical quality are estimated using an ordered logit model. Principal Findings. Ninety percent of the sample selected the dominant physician for both validity checks, indicating a level of attention to task comparable with prior studies. When presented with pairs of physicians who varied in technical and interpersonal quality, two-thirds of the sample (95 percent CI: 62, 72 percent) chose the physician who was higher in technical quality at least three out of five times (one-sample binomial test of proportion). Age, gender, and ethnicity were not significant predictors of choosing the physician who was higher in technical quality. Conclusions. These participants showed a strong preference for physicians of high technical quality when forced to make tradeoffs, but a substantial proportion of the sample preferred physicians of high interpersonal quality. Individual physician report cards should contain ample information in both domains to be most useful to patients.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Psychometric Properties of the Consumer Assessment of Health Plans Study (CAHPS®) 2.0 Adult Core SurveyHealth Services Research, 2003
- Patient Reports and Ratings of Individual Physicians: An Evaluation of the DoctorGuide and Consumer Assessment of Health Plans Study Provider-Level SurveysAmerican Journal of Medical Quality, 2003
- Strategies for Reporting Health Plan Performance Information to Consumers: Evidence from Controlled StudiesHealth Services Research, 2002
- What Cognitive Science Tells Us about the Design of Reports for ConsumersMedical Care Research and Review, 2002
- Assessing the Comparability of Various Measures of the Quality of Ambulatory CareMedical Care, 2002
- Consumer Reports in Health Care: Do They Make a Difference?Annual Review of Public Health, 2001
- The Primary Care Assessment SurveyMedical Care, 1998
- Informing Consumer Decisions in Health Care: Implications from Decision‐Making ResearchThe Milbank Quarterly, 1997
- Involving Consumers in Quality of Care AssessmentHealth Affairs, 1988
- The Dr. Fox effectAcademic Medicine, 1975