Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Jul 9;15(7):e0227845. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227845. eCollection 2020.
Our healthcare system is moving towards patient-centered and value-based care models that prioritize health outcomes that matter to patients. However, little is known about what aspects of care patients would prioritize when presented with choices of desirable attributes and whether these patient priorities differ based on certain demographics.
To assess patients' priorities for a range of attributes in ambulatory care consultations across five key health service delivery domains and determine potential associations between patient priorities and certain demographic profiles.
Using a What Matters to You survey patients ranked in order of importance various choices related to five health service domains (patient-physician relationship, personal responsibility, test/procedures, medications, and cost). Subjects were selected from two Johns Hopkins affiliated primary care clinics and a third gastroenterology subspecialty clinic over a period of 11 months. We calculated the percentage of respondents who selected each quality as their top 1-3 choice. Univariate and multivariate analyses determined demographic characteristics associated with patient priorities.
Humanistic qualities of physicians, leading a healthy lifestyle, shared decision making (SDM) for medications and tests/procedures as well as knowledge about insurance coverage were the most frequently ranked choices. Privately insured and more educated patients were less likely to rank humanistic qualities highly. Those with younger age, higher educational attainment and private insurance had higher odds of ranking healthy lifestyle as a top choice. Those with more education had higher odds of ranking SDM as a top choice.
Identifying what matters most to patients is useful as we move towards patient-centered and Value Based Care Models. Our findings suggest that patients have priorities on qualities they value across key health service domains. Multiple factors including patient demographics can be predictors of these priorities. Elucidating these preferences is a challenging but a valuable step in the right direction.
我们的医疗保健系统正在向以患者为中心和以价值为基础的护理模式转变,这些模式优先考虑对患者重要的健康结果。然而,对于患者在面临理想属性的选择时会优先考虑哪些护理方面,以及这些患者的优先事项是否会因某些人口统计学特征而有所不同,知之甚少。
评估患者在五个关键医疗服务提供领域的门诊护理咨询中对一系列属性的优先排序,并确定患者优先事项与某些人口统计学特征之间的潜在关联。
使用“对你重要的事”调查问卷,患者对与五个医疗服务领域(医患关系、个人责任、检查/程序、药物和费用)相关的各种选择进行了重要性排序。在 11 个月的时间里,从约翰霍普金斯大学附属的两个初级保健诊所和第三个胃肠病学专科诊所中选择了受试者。我们计算了选择每个质量作为前 1-3 个选择的受访者的百分比。单变量和多变量分析确定了与患者优先事项相关的人口统计学特征。
医生的人文素质、健康的生活方式、药物和检查/程序的共同决策(SDM)以及对保险覆盖范围的了解是最常被排名的选择。私人保险和受过更高教育的患者不太可能将人文素质评为高度重要。年龄较小、教育程度较高和私人保险的患者更有可能将健康的生活方式列为首选。教育程度较高的患者更有可能将 SDM 列为首选。
确定对患者最重要的事情是有用的,因为我们正在向以患者为中心和基于价值的护理模式转变。我们的研究结果表明,患者对关键医疗服务领域的各种属性都有优先考虑的品质。包括患者人口统计学特征在内的多个因素可以预测这些优先事项。阐明这些偏好是朝着正确方向迈出的具有挑战性但有价值的一步。