This paper uses patient responses to the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey for three years (2009-2011) from 1,333 acute-care hospitals in fourteen states to analyze patterns in 10 hospital-reported patient experience-of-care scores by 29 characteristics classified as: patient characteristics, payer source, patient severity, hospital characteristics, hospital operations, and market characteristics. We also evaluate how scores have changed over the three-year period. We find significant differences in patient experience-of-care scores by hospital characteristics for 250 out of 290 HCAHPS-hospital characteristic combinations measured. We find fewer significant differences in changes in scores from 2009-2011 (135 out of 290), with hospitals categorized as high scoring also reporting consistently greater improvement. We conclude that patient experience-of-care scores vary by hospital characteristics, although improvements in scores show less variety by hospital categorization.
CITATION STYLE
Johnston, E. M., Johnston, K. J., Bae, J., Hockenberry, J. M., Avgar, A. C., Milstein, A., … Becker, E. (2015). Impact of hospital characteristics on patients’ experience of hospital care: Evidence from 14 states, 2009-2011. Patient Experience Journal, 2(2), 109–124. https://doi.org/10.35680/2372-0247.1089
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