Patients more satisfied when doctors treat fewer people, suggests study

Overall, the physicians who treated fewer patients got higher satisfaction ratings online, the study found

Lisa Rapaport | Reuters 

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who see fewer may get better than physicians who have higher-volume practices, a study of US urologists suggests. Researchers examined data on 665 urologists with in California, looking at how many they treated as well as what types of reviews they got on four websites: Yelp.com, Vitals.com, Healthgrades.com, and Ratemd.com.

“There could be more than one explanation for this but our hypothesis is that are happier when there is less waiting and more time to communicate with the doctor,” said lead study author Dr. Gregory Murphy, a researcher at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. “I think it shows that value efficiency, ease of access and communication,” Murphy said by email. Although the accuracy, usefulness and meaning of is debated by doctors, they increasingly influence decisions about where choose to receive care and impact how hospitals and systems evaluate doctors’ performance, the study team writes in JAMA Surgery, online March 21. may be influenced by a variety of factors that go beyond the quality of care to include things like waiting times to see physicians, the ease of scheduling appointments and how long spend in exam rooms, the authors note. For the study, the researchers examined billing and reimbursement data as well as the number of they saw and how many services they billed for in 2014.

Most of the urologists in the study were male, and they predominantly worked in nonacademic settings.

On a scale that ranged from a low of 1 to a high of 5, academic on average scored a 4.2 rating on the various patient satisfaction websites in the study. Outside of academic settings, scored an average rating of 3.7. Female urologists got similar satisfaction ratings as males, the study also found. For every 100 seen, average patient satisfaction ratings dropped by 0.04 points. Limitations of the study include the use of data from propublica.com, which may not accurately represent a physician’s non-patient population, the authors note. The study also wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how the number of treat might influence satisfaction ratings on consumer websites.

Even so, the results suggest that need to spend some time talking to their patients, Murphy said by email. When complications happen during treatment or surgery, may feel better about the experience when they feel like their doctor listens to them. “want someone who communicates well and listens in those unfortunate and frightening moments,” Murphy said. It’s possible that the results might not fully capture how many treat, however, because it only focused on people insured by Medicare, the US program for people 65 and older, said Dr. Brian Radbill, chief medical officer and vice president of medical affairs at Mount Sinai St. Luke’s in New York City. Older may have more complex medical needs and require more time and attention than younger patients, Radbillsaid.

Specialists, especially in urology where surgery is often involved, may only interact with a few times and have limited opportunities to build a relationship Radbill added.

“To the patient, it is often a completely alien, frightening experience so the patient may get the absolute highest quality of care, but the experience may be perceived as poor,” Radbill said. “They may leave feeling like they were not treated well - perhaps the doctor swooped in and swooped out, did not engage them like they are used to.”

First Published: Sat, April 14 2018. 22:55 IST