Manning Blaine T, Ahn Junyoung, Bohl Daniel D, Mayo Benjamin C, Louie Philip K, Singh Kern
From the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2016 Jul 1;41(13):E814-E819. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0000000000001385.
A prospective questionnaire.
The aim of this study was to evaluate factors that patients consider when selecting a spine surgeon.
The rise in consumer-driven health insurance plans has increased the role of patients in provider selection. The purpose of this study is to identify factors that may influence a patient's criteria for selecting a spine surgeon.
Two hundred thirty-one patients who sought treatment by one spine surgeon completed an anonymous questionnaire consisting of 26 questions. Four questions regarded demographic information; 16 questions asked respondents to rate the importance of specific criteria regarding spine surgeon selection (scale 1-10, with 10 being the most important); and six questions were multiple-choice regarding patient preferences toward aspects of their surgeon (age, training background, etc.).
Patients rated board certification (9.26 ± 1.67), in-network provider status (8.10 ± 3.04), and friendliness/bedside manner (8.01 ± 2.35) highest among factors considered when selecting a spine surgeon. Most patients (92%) reported that 30 minutes or less should pass between check-in and seeing their surgeon during a clinic appointment. Regarding whether their spine surgeon underwent training as a neurosurgeon versus an orthopedic surgeon, 25% reported no preference, 52% preferred neurosurgical training, and 23% preferred orthopedic training.
Our findings suggest that board certification and in-network health insurance plans may be most important in patients' criteria for choosing a spine surgeon. Advertisements were rated least important by patients. Patients expressed varying preferences regarding ideal surgeon age, training background, proximity, medical student/resident involvement, and clinic appointment availability. The surgeon from whom patients sought treatment completed an orthopedic surgery residency; hence, it is notable that 52% of patients preferred a spine surgeon with a neurosurgical background. In the context of patients' increasing role in health care decision-making and provider selection, understanding the factors that influence patients' selection of a spine surgeon is important.
前瞻性问卷调查。
本研究旨在评估患者在选择脊柱外科医生时考虑的因素。
消费者驱动的健康保险计划的增加,提高了患者在选择医疗服务提供者方面的作用。本研究的目的是确定可能影响患者选择脊柱外科医生标准的因素。
231名寻求一位脊柱外科医生治疗的患者完成了一份包含26个问题的匿名问卷。4个问题涉及人口统计学信息;16个问题要求受访者对脊柱外科医生选择的特定标准的重要性进行评分(1-10分,10分为最重要);6个问题是关于患者对其外科医生各方面(年龄、培训背景等)偏好的多项选择题。
在选择脊柱外科医生时考虑的因素中,患者对委员会认证(9.26±1.67)、网络内医疗服务提供者身份(8.10±3.04)以及友好度/床边态度(8.01±2.35)的评分最高。大多数患者(92%)报告说,在门诊预约时,从登记到见到外科医生的时间应在30分钟或更短。关于他们的脊柱外科医生是接受神经外科培训还是骨科培训,25%的人表示没有偏好,52%的人更喜欢神经外科培训,23%的人更喜欢骨科培训。
我们的研究结果表明,委员会认证和网络内健康保险计划可能是患者选择脊柱外科医生标准中最重要的因素。患者对广告的重要性评分最低。患者对理想的外科医生年龄、培训背景、距离、医学生/住院医师参与情况以及门诊预约的可用性表达了不同的偏好。寻求治疗的患者所找的外科医生完成了骨科手术住院医师培训;因此,值得注意的是,52%的患者更喜欢有神经外科背景的脊柱外科医生。在患者在医疗保健决策和选择医疗服务提供者方面的作用日益增加的背景下,了解影响患者选择脊柱外科医生的因素很重要。
3级。