Examining the Role of Physician Characteristics in Web-Based Verified Primary Care Physician Reviews: Observational Study

被引:1
|
作者
Sehgal, Neil K. R. [1 ,2 ]
Rader, Benjamin [2 ,3 ]
Brownstein, John S. [2 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Penn, Dept Comp & Informat Sci, 3330 Walnut St, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] Boston Childrens Hosp, Computat Epidemiol Grp, Boston, MA USA
[3] Boston Childrens Hosp, Dept Anesthesiol Crit Care & Pain Med, Boston, MA USA
[4] Harvard Med Sch, Dept Pediat, Boston, MA USA
关键词
patient review websites; patient online review; telemedicine; internet; online review; online reviews; rating; physician review; physician reviews; doctor review; doctor reviews; OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS; PATIENTS PERCEPTIONS; ATTIRE; SATISFACTION;
D O I
10.2196/51672
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Doctor review websites have become increasingly popular as a source of information for patients looking to selecta primary care provider. Zocdoc is one such platform that allows patients to not only rate and review their experiences withdoctors but also directly schedule appointments. This study examines how several physician characteristics including gender,age, race, languages spoken in a physician's office, education, and facial attractiveness impact the average numerical rating ofprimary care doctors on Zocdoc. Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate the association between physician characteristics and patient satisfactionratings on Zocdoc. Methods: A data set of 1455 primary care doctor profiles across 30 cities was scraped from Zocdoc. The profiles containedinformation on the physician's gender, education, and languages spoken in their office. Age, facial attractiveness, and race wereimputed from profile pictures using commercial facial analysis software. Each doctor profile listed an average overall satisfactionrating, bedside manner rating, and wait time rating from verified patients. Descriptive statistics, the Wilcoxon rank sum test, andmultivariate logistic regression were used to analyze the data. Results: The average overall rating on Zocdoc was highly positive, with older age, lower facial attractiveness, foreign degrees,allopathic degrees, and speaking more languages negatively associated with the average rating. However, the effect sizes of thesefactors were relatively small. For example, graduates of Latin American medical schools had a mean overall rating of 4.63compared to a 4.77 rating for US graduates (P<.001), a difference roughly equivalent to a 2.8% decrease in appointments. Onmultivariate analysis, being Asian and having a doctor of osteopathic medicine degree were positively associated with higheroverall ratings, while attending a South Asian medical school and speaking more European and Middle Eastern languages in theoffice were negatively associated with higher overall ratings. Conclusions: Overall, the findings suggest that age, facial attractiveness, education, and multilingualism do have some impacton web-based doctor reviews, but the numerical effect is small. Notably, bias may play out in many forms. For example, aphysician's appearance or accent may impact a patient's trust, confidence, or satisfaction with their physician, which could in turninfluence their take-up of preventative services and lead to either better or worse health outcomes. The study highlights the needfor further research in how physician characteristics influence patient ratings of care
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Physician Gender, Patient Risk, and Web-Based Reviews: Longitudinal Study of the Relationship Between Physicians' Gender and Their Web-Based Reviews
    Saifee, Danish Hasnain
    Hudnall, Matthew
    Raja, Uzma
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH, 2022, 24 (04)
  • [2] Surveying Ourselves: Examining the Use of a Web-Based Approach for a Physician Survey
    Matteson, Kristen A.
    Anderson, Britta L.
    Pinto, Stephanie B.
    Lopes, Vrishali
    Schulkin, Jay
    Clark, Melissa A.
    EVALUATION & THE HEALTH PROFESSIONS, 2011, 34 (04) : 448 - 463
  • [3] Effects of Online Physician Reviews and Physician Gender on Perceptions of Physician Skills and Primary Care Physician (PCP) Selection
    Li, Siyue
    Lee-Won, Roselyn J.
    McKnight, Jessica
    HEALTH COMMUNICATION, 2019, 34 (11) : 1250 - 1258
  • [4] Web-Based Physician Ratings for California Physicians on Probation
    Murphy, Gregory P.
    Awad, Mohannad A.
    Osterberg, E. Charles
    Gaither, Thomas W.
    Chumnarnsongkhroh, Thanabhudee
    Washington, Samuel L.
    Breyer, Benjamin N.
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH, 2017, 19 (08)
  • [5] The Voice of Chinese Health Consumers: A Text Mining Approach to Web-Based Physician Reviews
    Hao, Haijing
    Zhang, Kunpeng
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH, 2016, 18 (05)
  • [6] Development and deployment of a web-based physician order entry system
    Lee, YL
    Hsu, CY
    Hsieh, D
    Li, YC
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INFORMATICS, 2001, 62 (2-3) : 135 - 142
  • [7] Exploring physician specialist response rates to web-based surveys
    Cunningham, Ceara Tess
    Quan, Hude
    Hemmelgarn, Brenda
    Noseworthy, Tom
    Beck, Cynthia A.
    Dixon, Elijah
    Samuel, Susan
    Ghali, William A.
    Sykes, Lindsay L.
    Jette, Nathalie
    BMC MEDICAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY, 2015, 15
  • [8] Developing Embedded Taxonomy and Mining Patients' Interests From Web-Based Physician Reviews: Mixed-Methods Approach
    Li, Jia
    Liu, Minghui
    Li, Xiaojun
    Liu, Xuan
    Liu, Jingfang
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH, 2018, 20 (08)
  • [9] The Impact of Ambivalent Attitudes on the Helpfulness of Web-Based Reviews: Secondary Analysis of Data From a Large Physician Review Website
    Dong, Wei
    Liu, Yongmei
    Zhu, Zhangxiang
    Cao, Xianye
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH, 2023, 25
  • [10] The Impact of Social Media on Negative Online Physician Reviews: an Observational Study in a Large, Academic, Multispecialty Practice
    Widmer, R. Jay
    Shepard, Margaret
    Aase, Lee A.
    Wald, John T.
    Pruthi, Sandhya
    Timimi, Farris K.
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2019, 34 (01) : 98 - 101