Dunlea Robert, Lenert Leslie
Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT (RD, LL)
Biomedical Informatics Center, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC (LL)
Med Decis Making. 2015 Aug 1;35(6):691-702. doi: 10.1177/0272989X14566640. Epub 2015 Jan 14.
A specialty referral is a common but complex decision that often requires a primary care provider to balance his or her own interests with those of the patient.
To examine the factors that influence a patient's choice of a specialist for consultation for an asymptomatic condition and better understand the tradeoffs that patients are and are not willing to make in this decision.
Stratified cross-sectional convenience sample of subjects selected to parallel US population demographics.
Members of an Internet survey panel who reported seeing a physician in the past year whose responses met objective quality metrics for attention.
Respondents completed an adaptive conjoint analysis survey comparing specialists regarding eight attributes. The reliability of assessments and the predictive validity of models were measured using holdout samples. The relative importance (RI) of different attributes was computed using paired t tests. The implications of utility values were studied using market simulation methods.
Five hundred and thirty subjects completed the survey and had responses that met quality criteria. The reliability of responses was high (86% agreement), and models were predictive of patients' preferences (82.6% agreement with holdout choices). The most important attribute for patients was out-of-pocket cost (RI of 19.5%, P < 0.0001 v. other factors). Among the nonfinancial factors, "collaboration and communication" with the primary care provider was the most important attribute (RI of 13.1% P < 0.001). Third in importance was whether the specialist practiced shared decision making (RI of 12.2% P < 0.001 v. other factors except delay in consultation). Cost did not dominate decision making. In market simulations, patients frequently preferred more expensive providers. For example, most patients (76.3%) were willing to pay more ($80) to see a specialist who both collaborated well with their primary care provider and practiced shared decision making. Most patients prefer to wait for a doctor who practices shared decision making: Only one-third (32.3%) of patients preferred a paternalistic doctor who was available in 2 weeks over a doctor who practiced decision making but was available in 4 weeks.
In the setting of a referral for an asymptomatic but serious condition, out-of-pocket costs are important to patients; however, they also value specialists who collaborate and communicate well with their primary care providers and who practice shared decision making. Patients have wide variability in preferences for specialists, and referral decisions should be individualized.
专科转诊是一个常见但复杂的决策,通常需要初级保健提供者在自身利益与患者利益之间进行权衡。
研究影响患者选择专科医生咨询无症状疾病的因素,并更好地理解患者在这一决策中愿意和不愿意做出的权衡。
分层横断面便利样本,选取的受试者与美国人口统计学特征相似。
一个互联网调查小组的成员,他们报告在过去一年看过医生,其回答符合注意力的客观质量指标。
受访者完成了一项适应性联合分析调查,比较了专科医生的八个属性。使用保留样本测量评估的可靠性和模型的预测有效性。使用配对t检验计算不同属性的相对重要性(RI)。使用市场模拟方法研究效用值的含义。
530名受试者完成了调查,其回答符合质量标准。回答的可靠性很高(一致性为86%),模型能够预测患者的偏好(与保留选择的一致性为82.6%)。对患者来说最重要的属性是自付费用(RI为19.5%,与其他因素相比P<0.0001)。在非财务因素中,与初级保健提供者的“协作与沟通”是最重要的属性(RI为13.1%,P<0.001)。重要性排第三的是专科医生是否实行共同决策(RI为12.2%,与除咨询延迟外的其他因素相比P<0.001)。费用并不主导决策。在市场模拟中,患者经常更喜欢更昂贵的提供者。例如,大多数患者(76.3%)愿意多支付80美元去看一位既能与他们的初级保健提供者良好协作又实行共同决策的专科医生。大多数患者更愿意等待实行共同决策的医生:只有三分之一(32.3%)的患者更喜欢一位两周内可就诊的家长式医生,而不是一位实行共同决策但四周内可就诊的医生。
在转诊无症状但严重疾病的情况下,自付费用对患者很重要;然而,他们也重视那些能与初级保健提供者良好协作与沟通并实行共同决策的专科医生。患者对专科医生的偏好差异很大,转诊决策应该个体化。