Litcius/Paper detail

Does Care Transition Matter? Exploring the Newly Published HCAHPS Measure

Rafael Hod, Oded Maimon, Eyal Zimlichman

2020American Journal of Medical Quality10 citationsDOI

Abstract

In recent years, health care systems have undergone a consumer revolution—putting patients at the center. The study aim was to explore the association between care transition—the new measure proposed by the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS)—and hospital patients’ overall rating based on their experience, along with hospitals’ internal characteristics and operational attributes. Using HCAHPS and American Hospital Association published databases, the authors examined the association between hospital characteristics and measures of patient experience, focusing on the care transition measure, in 2350 US hospitals. Positive significant association was found between care transition and overall rating ( P < .0001). An interaction regression model revealed that each of the following moderators—teaching affiliation, location, and membership in a health system—significantly (all P < .05) strengthens the association between care transition and overall rating in a positive direction. These findings may help improve hospital rating, value-based payments, and patient-centered outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHealth careAssociation (psychology)Family medicineAcute carePatient experiencePaymentMEDLINERating systemNursingPsychologyLawEconomic growthEconomicsPolitical scienceEnvironmental economicsWorld Wide WebComputer sciencePsychotherapistPatient Satisfaction in HealthcareHealthcare Policy and ManagementPrimary Care and Health Outcomes