Patient satisfaction and value based purchasing in hospitals, Odisha, India

被引:1
|
作者
Woskie, Liana [1 ]
Kalita, Anuska [2 ]
Bose, Bijetri [2 ]
Chakraborty, Arpita [3 ]
Gupta, Kirti [3 ]
Yip, Winnie [2 ]
机构
[1] Tufts Univ, Dept Community Hlth, 574 Boston Ave,Suite 208, Medford, MA 02155 USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Dept Global Hlth & Populat, Boston, MA USA
[3] Oxford Policy Management India Pvt Ltd, New Delhi, India
关键词
HEALTH SYSTEMS RESPONSIVENESS; CONSUMER ASSESSMENT; CARE; QUALITY; DETERMINANTS; INSTRUMENTS; CHALLENGES; VALIDATION; CAHPS((R));
D O I
10.2471/BLT.24.290519
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Objective To examine how a general inpatient satisfaction survey functions as a hospital performance measure. Methods We conducted a mixed-methods pilot study of the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Health Providers and Systems survey in Odisha, India. We divided the study into three steps: cognitive testing of the survey, item testing with exploratory factor analysis and content validity indexing. Cognitive testing involved 50 participants discussing their interpretation of survey items. The survey was then administered to 507 inpatients across five public hospitals in Odisha, followed by exploratory factor analysis. Finally, we interviewed 15 individuals to evaluate the content validity of the survey items. Findings Cognitive testing revealed that six out of 18 survey questions were not consistently understood within the Odisha inpatient setting, highlighting issues around responsibilities for care. Exploratory factor analysis identified a six-factor structure explaining 66.7% of the variance. Regression models showed that interpersonal care from doctors and nurses had the strongest association with overall satisfaction. An assessment of differential item functioning revealed that patients with a socially marginalized caste reported higher disrespectful care, though this did not translate into differences in reported satisfaction. Content validity indexing suggested that discordance between experiences of disrespectful care and satisfaction ratings might be due to low patient expectations. Conclusion Using satisfaction ratings without nuanced approaches in value-based purchasing programmes may mask poor-quality interpersonal services, particularly for historically marginalized patients. Surveys should be designed to accurately capture true levels of dissatisfaction, ensuring that patient concerns are not hidden.
引用
收藏
页码:509 / 520
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Association between the Value-Based Purchasing pay for performance program and patient mortality in US hospitals: observational study
    Figueroa, Jose F.
    Tsugawa, Yusuke
    Zheng, Jie
    Orav, E. John
    Jha, Ashish K.
    BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2016, 353
  • [2] Nursing Care, Inpatient Satisfaction, and Value-Based Purchasing Vital Connections
    Wolosin, Robert
    Ayala, Louis
    Fulton, Bradley R.
    JOURNAL OF NURSING ADMINISTRATION, 2012, 42 (06): : 321 - 325
  • [3] Hospital value-Based Purchasing and 30-Day Readmissions: Are Hospitals Ready?
    Haley, D. Rob
    Zhao, Mei
    Spaulding, Aaron
    NURSING ECONOMICS, 2016, 34 (03): : 110 - 116
  • [4] Demographic factors and hospital size predict patient satisfaction varianceimplications for hospital value-based purchasing
    McFarland, Daniel C.
    Ornstein, Katherine A.
    Holcombe, Randall F.
    JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL MEDICINE, 2015, 10 (08) : 503 - 509
  • [5] The Role of Patient Satisfaction in Hospitals' Medicare Reimbursements
    Liu, Lu
    Gauri, Dinesh K.
    Jindal, Rupinder P.
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC POLICY & MARKETING, 2021, 40 (04) : 558 - 570
  • [6] Do Magnet®-Designated Hospitals Perform Better on Medicare's Value-Based Purchasing Program?
    Spaulding, Aaron
    Hamadi, Hanadi
    Moody, LaRee
    Lentz, Luanne
    Liu, Xinliang
    Wu, Yu
    JOURNAL OF NURSING ADMINISTRATION, 2020, 50 (7-8): : 395 - 401
  • [7] Measuring Outcomes And Efficiency In Medicare Value-Based Purchasing
    Tompkins, Christopher P.
    Higgins, Aparna R.
    Ritter, Grant A.
    HEALTH AFFAIRS, 2009, 28 (02) : W251 - W261
  • [8] Physician-Owned Surgical Hospitals Outperform Other Hospitals in Medicare Value-Based Purchasing Program
    Ramirez, Adriana G.
    Tracci, Margaret C.
    Stukenborg, George J.
    Turrentine, Florence E.
    Kozower, Benjamin D.
    Jones, R. Scott
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, 2016, 223 (04) : 559 - 567
  • [9] Is electronic health record use associated with patient satisfaction in hospitals?
    Kazley, Abby Swanson
    Diana, Mark L.
    Ford, Eric W.
    Menachemi, Nir
    HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT REVIEW, 2012, 37 (01) : 23 - 30
  • [10] Patient satisfaction among Saudi academic hospitals: a systematic review
    Alasiri, Ahmed Ali
    Alotaibi, Saad A.
    Schussler, Eric
    BMJ OPEN, 2024, 14 (05):