Henrikson Nora B, Chang Eva, Ulrich Kevin, King Deborah, Anderson Melissa L
Research Associate at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, formerly Group Health Research Institute, in Seattle, WA.
Research Public Health Analyst from the Division of Health Services and Social Policy at RTI International in Waltham, MA.
Perm J. 2017;21:16-070. doi: 10.7812/TPP/16-070.
Health care costs have increasingly shifted to patients, and financial distress caused by medical care has increased. Patients may wish to discuss costs with their clinicians.
Describe patient preferences for communication about cost in the clinical setting.
Cross-sectional, self-administered survey of a stratified random sample of the population insured in an integrated health care system in Washington State. Our sampling frame was the entire membership aged 21 years or older. Sampling was stratified by sex and group practice enrollment.
Preference for discussing health care costs with one's physician. We conducted regression analyses to determine predictors of communication preference; potential predictors included demographic characteristics, financial burden, delay in seeking care because of cost, and socioeconomic variables. Survey responses were weighted to adjust for nonresponse and sampling.
Of 7200 invitations sent, 2200 survey responses were returned. Ninety-two percent wished to know their out-of-pocket costs before beginning treatment. Most respondents preferred their physician talk with them about out-of-pocket costs (81.4%) and expressed comfort with discussing costs with their physician (75.6%). Overall, 43.7% reported any delay in seeking care in the previous 12 months. One in 5 respondents (21.6%) reported family medical debt. Delay in seeking care was positively and independently associated with preferring to discuss costs with one's physician; current medical financial burden was not.
Patient preferences for communication about costs with physicians are high, and medical debt and delay in care-seeking are prevalent. Delay in care-seeking independently predicts cost communication preferences.
医疗保健成本越来越多地转由患者承担,医疗护理造成的经济困境有所增加。患者可能希望与临床医生讨论费用问题。
描述患者在临床环境中对费用沟通的偏好。
对华盛顿州一个综合医疗保健系统中参保人群的分层随机样本进行横断面自填式调查。我们的抽样框架是所有21岁及以上的会员。抽样按性别和团体执业登记情况进行分层。
与医生讨论医疗保健费用的偏好。我们进行了回归分析以确定沟通偏好的预测因素;潜在预测因素包括人口统计学特征、经济负担、因费用问题而推迟就医以及社会经济变量。对调查回复进行加权以调整无应答和抽样情况。
在发出的7200份邀请中,收到了2200份调查回复。92%的人希望在开始治疗前了解自付费用。大多数受访者希望医生与他们讨论自付费用(81.4%),并表示愿意与医生讨论费用问题(75.6%)。总体而言,43.7%的人报告在过去12个月中有推迟就医的情况。五分之一的受访者(21.6%)报告有家庭医疗债务。推迟就医与更愿意与医生讨论费用呈正相关且独立相关;当前的医疗经济负担则不然。
患者与医生沟通费用问题的偏好较高,医疗债务和推迟就医的情况普遍存在。推迟就医独立预测费用沟通偏好。