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Patient Satisfaction with Hospital Inpatient Care: Effects of Trust, Medical Insurance and Perceived Quality of Care

OBJECTIVE: Deteriorations in the patient-provider relationship in China have attracted increasing attention in the international community. This study aims to explore the role of trust in patient satisfaction with hospital inpatient care, and how patient-provider trust is shaped from the perspective...

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Autores principales: Shan, Linghan, Li, Ye, Ding, Ding, Wu, Qunhong, Liu, Chaojie, Jiao, Mingli, Hao, Yanhua, Han, Yuzhen, Gao, Lijun, Hao, Jiejing, Wang, Lan, Xu, Weilan, Ren, Jiaojiao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5068749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27755558
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164366
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author Shan, Linghan
Li, Ye
Ding, Ding
Wu, Qunhong
Liu, Chaojie
Jiao, Mingli
Hao, Yanhua
Han, Yuzhen
Gao, Lijun
Hao, Jiejing
Wang, Lan
Xu, Weilan
Ren, Jiaojiao
author_facet Shan, Linghan
Li, Ye
Ding, Ding
Wu, Qunhong
Liu, Chaojie
Jiao, Mingli
Hao, Yanhua
Han, Yuzhen
Gao, Lijun
Hao, Jiejing
Wang, Lan
Xu, Weilan
Ren, Jiaojiao
author_sort Shan, Linghan
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Deteriorations in the patient-provider relationship in China have attracted increasing attention in the international community. This study aims to explore the role of trust in patient satisfaction with hospital inpatient care, and how patient-provider trust is shaped from the perspectives of both patients and providers. METHODS: We adopted a mixed methods approach comprising a multivariate logistic regression model using secondary data (1200 people with inpatient experiences over the past year) from the fifth National Health Service Survey (NHSS, 2013) in Heilongjiang Province to determine the associations between patient satisfaction and trust, financial burden and perceived quality of care, followed by in-depth interviews with 62 conveniently selected key informants (27 from health and 35 from non-health sectors). A thematic analysis established a conceptual framework to explain deteriorating patient-provider relationships. FINDINGS: About 24% of respondents reported being dissatisfied with hospital inpatient care. The logistic regression model indicated that patient satisfaction was positively associated with higher level of trust (OR = 14.995), lower levels of hospital medical expenditure (OR = 5.736–1.829 as compared with the highest quintile of hospital expenditure), good staff attitude (OR = 3.155) as well as good ward environment (OR = 2.361). But patient satisfaction was negatively associated with medical insurance for urban residents and other insurance status (OR = 0.215–0.357 as compared with medical insurance for urban employees). The qualitative analysis showed that patient trust—the most significant predictor of patient satisfaction—is shaped by perceived high quality of service delivery, empathic and caring interpersonal interactions, and a better designed medical insurance that provides stronger financial protection and enables more equitable access to health care. CONCLUSION: At the core of high levels of patient dissatisfaction with hospital care is the lack of trust. The current health care system reform in China has yet to address the fundamental problems embedded in the system that caused distrust. A singular focus on doctor-patient inter-personal interactions will not offer a successful solution to the deteriorated patient-provider relationships unless a systems approach to accountability is put into place involving all stakeholders.
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spelling pubmed-50687492016-10-27 Patient Satisfaction with Hospital Inpatient Care: Effects of Trust, Medical Insurance and Perceived Quality of Care Shan, Linghan Li, Ye Ding, Ding Wu, Qunhong Liu, Chaojie Jiao, Mingli Hao, Yanhua Han, Yuzhen Gao, Lijun Hao, Jiejing Wang, Lan Xu, Weilan Ren, Jiaojiao PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: Deteriorations in the patient-provider relationship in China have attracted increasing attention in the international community. This study aims to explore the role of trust in patient satisfaction with hospital inpatient care, and how patient-provider trust is shaped from the perspectives of both patients and providers. METHODS: We adopted a mixed methods approach comprising a multivariate logistic regression model using secondary data (1200 people with inpatient experiences over the past year) from the fifth National Health Service Survey (NHSS, 2013) in Heilongjiang Province to determine the associations between patient satisfaction and trust, financial burden and perceived quality of care, followed by in-depth interviews with 62 conveniently selected key informants (27 from health and 35 from non-health sectors). A thematic analysis established a conceptual framework to explain deteriorating patient-provider relationships. FINDINGS: About 24% of respondents reported being dissatisfied with hospital inpatient care. The logistic regression model indicated that patient satisfaction was positively associated with higher level of trust (OR = 14.995), lower levels of hospital medical expenditure (OR = 5.736–1.829 as compared with the highest quintile of hospital expenditure), good staff attitude (OR = 3.155) as well as good ward environment (OR = 2.361). But patient satisfaction was negatively associated with medical insurance for urban residents and other insurance status (OR = 0.215–0.357 as compared with medical insurance for urban employees). The qualitative analysis showed that patient trust—the most significant predictor of patient satisfaction—is shaped by perceived high quality of service delivery, empathic and caring interpersonal interactions, and a better designed medical insurance that provides stronger financial protection and enables more equitable access to health care. CONCLUSION: At the core of high levels of patient dissatisfaction with hospital care is the lack of trust. The current health care system reform in China has yet to address the fundamental problems embedded in the system that caused distrust. A singular focus on doctor-patient inter-personal interactions will not offer a successful solution to the deteriorated patient-provider relationships unless a systems approach to accountability is put into place involving all stakeholders. Public Library of Science 2016-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC5068749/ /pubmed/27755558 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164366 Text en © 2016 Shan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Shan, Linghan
Li, Ye
Ding, Ding
Wu, Qunhong
Liu, Chaojie
Jiao, Mingli
Hao, Yanhua
Han, Yuzhen
Gao, Lijun
Hao, Jiejing
Wang, Lan
Xu, Weilan
Ren, Jiaojiao
Patient Satisfaction with Hospital Inpatient Care: Effects of Trust, Medical Insurance and Perceived Quality of Care
title Patient Satisfaction with Hospital Inpatient Care: Effects of Trust, Medical Insurance and Perceived Quality of Care
title_full Patient Satisfaction with Hospital Inpatient Care: Effects of Trust, Medical Insurance and Perceived Quality of Care
title_fullStr Patient Satisfaction with Hospital Inpatient Care: Effects of Trust, Medical Insurance and Perceived Quality of Care
title_full_unstemmed Patient Satisfaction with Hospital Inpatient Care: Effects of Trust, Medical Insurance and Perceived Quality of Care
title_short Patient Satisfaction with Hospital Inpatient Care: Effects of Trust, Medical Insurance and Perceived Quality of Care
title_sort patient satisfaction with hospital inpatient care: effects of trust, medical insurance and perceived quality of care
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5068749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27755558
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164366
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