Faculty of Law, Business and Economics, Institute for Healthcare Management and Health Sciences, University of Bayreuth, Prieserstraße 2, 95444, Bayreuth, Germany.
Department of Information and Communication, Faculty for Media, Information and Design, University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Hannover, Germany.
Eur J Health Econ. 2024 Mar;25(2):293-305. doi: 10.1007/s10198-023-01587-6. Epub 2023 Apr 13.
This study aims to determine the intention to use hospital report cards (HRCs) for hospital referral purposes in the presence or absence of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) as well as to explore the relevance of publicly available hospital performance information from the perspective of referring physicians.
We identified the most relevant information for hospital referral purposes based on a literature review and qualitative research. Primary survey data were collected (May-June 2021) on a sample of 591 referring orthopedists in Germany and analyzed using structural equation modeling. Participating orthopedists were recruited using a sequential mixed-mode strategy and randomly allocated to work with HRCs in the presence (intervention) or absence (control) of PROs.
Overall, 420 orthopedists (mean age 53.48, SD 8.04) were included in the analysis. The presence of PROs on HRCs was not associated with an increased intention to use HRCs (p = 0.316). Performance expectancy was shown to be the most important determinant for using HRCs (path coefficient: 0.387, p < .001). However, referring physicians have doubts as to whether HRCs can help them. We identified "complication rate" and "the number of cases treated" as most important for the hospital referral decision making; PROs were rated slightly less important.
This study underpins the purpose of HRCs, namely to support referring physicians in searching for a hospital. Nevertheless, only a minority would support the use of HRCs for the next hospital search in its current form. We showed that presenting relevant information on HRCs did not increase their use intention.
本研究旨在确定在有无患者报告结局(PROs)的情况下,医生在转诊医院时使用医院报告卡(HRCs)的意愿,并从转诊医生的角度探讨公开的医院绩效信息的相关性。
我们根据文献回顾和定性研究确定了与转诊目的最相关的信息。在 2021 年 5 月至 6 月期间,对德国的 591 名骨科转诊医生进行了一项基于样本的主要调查,采用结构方程模型进行分析。通过顺序混合模式策略招募参与的骨科医生,并随机分配他们在使用 HRCs 时(干预组)或不使用 PROs(对照组)。
总体而言,共有 420 名骨科医生(平均年龄 53.48,标准差 8.04)纳入分析。HRCs 上的 PROs 并不与增加使用 HRCs 的意愿相关(p=0.316)。绩效期望被证明是使用 HRCs 的最重要决定因素(路径系数:0.387,p<0.001)。然而,转诊医生对 HRCs 是否能帮助他们表示怀疑。我们发现“并发症发生率”和“治疗病例数”对医院转诊决策最重要;PROs 的重要性略低。
本研究支持 HRCs 的目的,即支持转诊医生寻找医院。然而,只有少数人会支持在当前形式下使用 HRCs 进行下一次医院搜索。我们表明,在 HRCs 上呈现相关信息并没有增加他们的使用意愿。