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Eliciting preferences for outpatient care experiences in Hungary: A discrete choice experiment with a national representative sample
Eliciting preferences for outpatient care experiences in Hungary: A discrete choice experiment with a national representative sample
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Eliciting preferences for outpatient care experiences in Hungary: A discrete choice experiment with a national representative sample
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Eliciting preferences for outpatient care experiences in Hungary: A discrete choice experiment with a national representative sample
Eliciting preferences for outpatient care experiences in Hungary: A discrete choice experiment with a national representative sample

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Eliciting preferences for outpatient care experiences in Hungary: A discrete choice experiment with a national representative sample
Eliciting preferences for outpatient care experiences in Hungary: A discrete choice experiment with a national representative sample
Journal Article

Eliciting preferences for outpatient care experiences in Hungary: A discrete choice experiment with a national representative sample

2020
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Overview
Patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) are central to inform on the responsiveness of health systems to citizens' health care needs and expectations. At their current form, PREMs do not reflect the weights that patients assign to varying aspects of the care experience. We aimed to investigate patients' preferences and willingness to pay (WTP) for attributes of the care experience in outpatient settings. A discrete choice experiment was conducted among a representative sample of the general adult population of Hungary (n = 1000). Choice set attributes and levels were defined based on OECD's standardized PREMs (e.g. a doctor spending enough time in consultation, providing easy to understand explanations, giving opportunity to ask questions, and involving in decision making) and a price attribute. Conditional and mixed logit analyses were conducted. WTP estimates were computed in preference and WTP space. The respondents most preferred attribute was that of a doctor spending enough time in consultation, followed by involvement in decision making. Moreover, waiting times had a less important effect on respondents' choice preference compared with aspects of the doctor-patient relationship. Estimates in the WTP space varied from [euro]4.38 (2.85-5.90) for waiting an hour less at a doctor's office to [euro]36.13 (32.07-40.18) for a consultation where a doctor spends enough time with a patient relative to a consultation where a doctor does not. A preference-based PREMs approach provide insight on the value patients assign to different aspects of their care experience. This can inform the decisions of policy-makers and other stakeholders to coordinate efforts and resource allocation in a more targeted manner, by acting on attributes of the care experience that have a greater impact on the implementation of patient-centered care.